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#1
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http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod
It is reported that a 24' Mako ran between a tug and a barge being towed astern. The Mako hit the tow wire and was capsized, throwing the passengers into the water. |
#2
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"Wayne.B" wrote
http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod It is reported that a 24' Mako ran between a tug and a barge being towed astern. The Mako hit the tow wire and was capsized, throwing the passengers into the water. "The captain tried in vain to warn the powerboat, blowing his whistle four times, but the Mako continued." Isn't five blasts the standard danger signal? Or maybe the tug sounded a five blast signal four times and the above is the reporter's interpretation. Not that someone putting himself in that situation might necessarily be expected to understand the signal anyway. |
#3
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On Mon, 22 Oct 2007 08:18:25 -0400, "Ernest Scribbler"
wrote: "Wayne.B" wrote http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod It is reported that a 24' Mako ran between a tug and a barge being towed astern. The Mako hit the tow wire and was capsized, throwing the passengers into the water. "The captain tried in vain to warn the powerboat, blowing his whistle four times, but the Mako continued." Isn't five blasts the standard danger signal? Or maybe the tug sounded a five blast signal four times and the above is the reporter's interpretation. Not that someone putting himself in that situation might necessarily be expected to understand the signal anyway. It's 5 blasts, all tug captains understand that very well. My guess is that it was reported inaccurately one way or another. |
#4
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"Wayne.B" wrote
It's 5 blasts, all tug captains understand that very well. It was the Mako captain whose understanding I was casting aspersions upon. I read another account of the incident which said that in addition to horn signals, the tug was shining a spotlight on the cable to try to warn the guy off. |
#5
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On Mon, 22 Oct 2007 10:47:37 -0400, "Ernest Scribbler"
wrote: It was the Mako captain whose understanding I was casting aspersions upon. I read another account of the incident which said that in addition to horn signals, the tug was shining a spotlight on the cable to try to warn the guy off. Quite likely, I've often seen them do that, light up the cable and the barge. We've even had tug captains call us on the radio from two miles away to give us a heads up, even though there was no imminent danger. Running around NY harbor at night without radar and good skills is an accident waiting to happen, negligence in my opinion. |
#6
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On Oct 21, 10:11?pm, Wayne.B wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod It is reported that a 24' Mako ran between a tug and a barge being towed astern. The Mako hit the tow wire and was capsized, throwing the passengers into the water. Sounds like general ignorance and inexperience on the part of the speedboat operator. That time of night, alcohol could also be a factor. Guy probably slept through USCG Aux or Power Squadron, if he ever took a course at all. The mandatory boater education laws enacted in most states during the last decade were supposed to reduce this type of incident- who know, maybe they have- we don't hear about the stuff that *didn't* happen. Even so, at least in our state the mandatory education requirement is one step ahead of meaningless. The state accepts passing scores from on-line courses that administer "open book" tests, so you don't have to actually learn anything- just know how to look it up long enough to check off the appropriate box on multiple choice. But of course all the education and certification in the world (in almost any field) won't prevent the terminally stupid from exiting the gene pool. Too bad that people have to die once in a while to remind others that screwing off and not paying attention can have deadly consequences on a boat. Hopefully, this horrible tragedy will inspire other people to be more careful. |
#7
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On Oct 22, 1:35 pm, Chuck Gould wrote:
On Oct 21, 10:11?pm, Wayne.B wrote: http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod It is reported that a 24' Mako ran between a tug and a barge being towed astern. The Mako hit the tow wire and was capsized, throwing the passengers into the water. Sounds like general ignorance and inexperience on the part of the speedboat operator. That time of night, alcohol could also be a factor. Guy probably slept through USCG Aux or Power Squadron, if he ever took a course at all. The mandatory boater education laws enacted in most states during the last decade were supposed to reduce this type of incident- who know, maybe they have- we don't hear about the stuff that *didn't* happen. Even so, at least in our state the mandatory education requirement is one step ahead of meaningless. The state accepts passing scores from on-line courses that administer "open book" tests, so you don't have to actually learn anything- just know how to look it up long enough to check off the appropriate box on multiple choice. But of course all the education and certification in the world (in almost any field) won't prevent the terminally stupid from exiting the gene pool. Too bad that people have to die once in a while to remind others that screwing off and not paying attention can have deadly consequences on a boat. Hopefully, this horrible tragedy will inspire other people to be more careful. There was a very old man in my class. He was very concerened about taking a test. The instructor assured him he would pass, "The test is easy, after all, if you don't pass, the state does not get to collect your $25". Everyone passed that day, he said he had not had anyone fail it to that point anyway. I got a perfect score, and finished first too. Now I carry a fire extinguisher on my boat ![]() |
#8
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![]() The Mako skipper was prolly down in the cuddy, watching T-Wee, or flogging the First Mate.. JR Wayne.B wrote: http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod It is reported that a 24' Mako ran between a tug and a barge being towed astern. The Mako hit the tow wire and was capsized, throwing the passengers into the water. -- -------------------------------------------------------------- Home Page: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth |
#9
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Wayne.B wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/3ymzod A sad story. I'had a similar experience about twenty years ago sailing across the north sea towards England. At around 2am it was my turn to take over the watch. The buddy before was still busy writing the log at the chart table and we caught a 'securite - securite - securite' message. He got ****ed of us leaning over the table to hear better and turned the radio off ! Some hours later, trying to identify each oil rig with the chart, there was one we could not identify and its position was funny anyway. There were a couple of motor boats close to it, lit up like a Christmas tree. We only realized when we were close that we were attempting to cross the path of a towed oil rig. We would have made it in front of the first tug, to be nicely tucked away leeward between two tugs and their cables... The tug closest to use did turn on a search light illuminating us nicely as we were tacking away and hailed us on the radio. Interpreting lights at night is not easy, we had about 20 knots of wind on a 39-footer and were attentive to whats going on. Despite this we were late in our maneuver. Markus |
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