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![]() "NOYB" wrote in message et... wrote in message oups.com... Scott Sexton wrote: Does anyone know who was cited for this accident? http://www.m90.org/index.php?id=11568 Was it the CG for not altering course to avoid an emminent collision, or the PB for not paying attention? ************************************************* Scott H. Sexton help@ www.sexton.com sexton.com Eeyore's Birthday Party http://eeyores.sexton.com ************************************************* While the term "right of way" has fallen into general disuse among modern mariners, if this were a situation involving two civilian boats the boat approaching from starboard would be called the "stand on" vessel and the vessel from which the video was shot would be the "give way" vessel. It would be incumbent upon *both* vessels to avoid the collision, and under the COLREGS the prior understanding would be that the vessel approaching from starboard would maintain course and speed unless it became apparent that a collision was imminent. Under those same COLREGS, the give way vessel would either change speed or (preferably) alter course dramatically and visibly- normally to starboard to pass astern of the stand on vessel. It would take somebody better versed in the finite details of COLREGS to say whether military, police, fire, or rescue vessels require all other vessels to give way, but I would be surprised if that isn't the case. By common sense alone, most of us avoid impeding fire, police, or CG boats. I don't know whether the skipper of the CG boat could be exonerated because he wasn't a civilian boat- but he or she should have and could have avoided the collision with the little speed boat. Obviously the small boat was in sight of the CG patrolboat and the risk of collision was apparent. That said, I can't understand why the skipper of the little speed boat wasn't keeping a better watch. A single glance to port would have been sufficient to alert him that even as the stand on boat (in a civilian situation) he needed to do something to avoid wrecking his boat. It's also another example of a problem that would have been resolved by one of my pet crusades....recommending or requiring a VHF for every boat operating in waters patrolled by the USCG. I have a VHF on my 17' Whaler, but when I'm operating at or near WOT, I can't hear a thing that's being said on it. I had to install a remote speaker on our 32 footer, even though the engine cover was very well insulated and the boat ran pretty quite at the helm seat at cruising speed. |
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