View attachment 74439
My favourite part of the report.... "to warm up and have some tea", so british...!
View attachment 74439
My favourite part of the report.... "to warm up and have some tea", so british...!
I must admit to being a bit surprised that the skipper holds a commercially endorsed Yachtmaster Offshore Certificate of Competence when he also advises that this was his ‘first full darkness sea passage’, surely to reach a Commercially endorsed YM he would have been expected to have undertaken several full darkness passages as skipper?
Who blames the DVLA for car crashes.........
Everybody who called for the motorway training which is now being introduced?
He got his ticket in 2004, when he was 21. Fast track yacht master courses strike again?
No more motorway crashes then. Good oh.
"strike again"? Are graduates of fast track yacht master courses disproportionately responsible for sinking vessels?
And is that really relevant after 13 years which would have required 2 re-validations, each asserting a minimum of 150 commercial days at sea?
Yup it's skipper error. I have plenty of sympathy re being disoriented slightly in the dark, but the skipper's method to dealing with that was very poor. Eg, he shouldn't have done 9knots during his bodged encounter with the incoming fishing vessel and he shouldn't have sped up until had resestablished where he was. Also he was steering manually you can conclude, and (imho) you shouldn't when you only have 4 eyes looking (or 2 as in this case, for part of the time) steer manually. Should let a/p steer the boat in the dark (with very careful observation) because steering manually creates an extra thing to have to concentrate on, which distracts from building awareness of where you are and observing radar/plotter. Just imho.
It reads to me that the skipper, being very experienced and knowledgeable of the area, has treated the departure and subsequent pilotage with a degree of familiarity and relied on that. Clearly got lost, caused by complacency perhaps.
Ann interesting report.
Pleanty of lessons for all of us....
How many of us can say we never just go down hop on the boat. fire it up and head off without a plan in an area we think we are familiar with.
I do.
He did not prepare the boat before he left.
He did not prepare a passage plan.
He did not prepare himself....
The report doesn’t mention RADAR or Chart or Chart plotter. Just the consol lights were affecting his night vision.
So he wasn’t using his equipment effectively because he had not set it up. If he had any..
He came out of the marina winging it.
...
I'm not aware of any a/p+plotter combo offering such functionality.Let's say the skipper was on A/P leaving the port then went to manual steering to avoid the incoming boat.
When he went back on A/P it would have turned quite sharply to get back on track (my boat does).
Do the latest A/P's plotters take into account buoys and other hazards when attempting to correct XTE?