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Good post!
On Sun, 20 Nov 2005 12:04:57 -0400, Terry Spragg wrote: Beat me to it! I hate to join a choir late, but... Bill McKee wrote: Much snipped. And your motor is not propelling machinery? Only if it is engaged and capable of overcoming the power of the wind. So my "power boat" is not a power boat for rules when the motor is turned off and I am drifting? That's right. You become a vessel not under command, I believe. To the outside world, you could be injured, ill, asleep, or having fallen off miles before your boat ran out of gas, a pedestrian. You will be given every consideration and possibly a tow home, a coffee, and a chance to use the head, even a warm berth along with a warm blankey, even a medicinal dose of brandy, splints for your broken bones, even the "breath of life", provided the tanker can get stopped before mashing you. Unfortunately, sailboats probably do not carry enough fuel to replenish your tanks sufficiently to get you home, else you might get some of it, too. At sea, Billy, pedestrians have the absolute, inarguable right of way;-) To run over one, even in the dark, is manslaughter if he dies, even if he does make an unexpected turn in front of you. Negligent manslaughter, if you were not keeping an adequate lookout, or were running at excessive speed under the circumstances, which is almost the same as murder. The regulations govern men, not boats. Those who can manouver best have the most responsibility to avoid hazards. It makes sense, if you think about it, and if you read the rules carefully and with an open mind you will see it plain. You are right, sailing vessels cannot turn whenever they want. Nor can they always prevent turns whenever they want, thanks to the wind and other obstacles. Surely your position is not that sailors do not have the same right to enjoy the water as do power boaters? It is said among sailors that essentially we ignore power boats simply because we have no choise, being at their mercey. We sailors cannot outrun, avoid, or catch high powered boats except possibly double reefed in a steady gale where you might be puking up your guts amidst the rollers, unable to maintain any speed at all whilst struggling to survive in your fair weather speedboat. Circumstances rule boats. Men do what they can. The rest is common sense. The colregs are common sense, written by lawyers, maritime lawyers at that, and are therefore unintelligible to most mere mortal landlubbers. Don't feel bad. Furthermore, the regs have been argued by better men than us, for hundreds of years, and reflect the findings of numerous lawsuits, trials, boards of inquiry, courts martial, et al. They must be read with painful attention to the merest comma. You must realize too, that power boat regulations are somewhat junior to those governing sail, which I gather you could never understand, since you do not appreciate the realities of sail, nor probably of power for that matter. Your jet boat is a dangerous toy. You must understand that sailboats, even with their engines engaged, try as they might, may not actually be being propelled under control of the engine, but may well be in the teeth of the unco-operative wind and may be struggling with control. It is a part of sailing, like rocks awash. Even if they were after you, you could always stay out of reach, eh? Terry K -- John H "It's *not* a baby kicking, bride of mine, it's just a fetus!" A Famous Hypocrite |
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