Sgeir
Well-Known Member
Apologies if you've already seen this , but it might be worth a second look.
I have always understood that these ferries have to give way to all traffic, but it looked as if this was replaced by "small gives way to large".I hadn't seen it. Many thanks for posting.
I loved the bit where the blue ferry just went back and forth amidst all the opposing traffic. Brilliant.
Who on Earth puts on flourescent green sails? I suppose it was the Irish.
I have always understood that these ferries have to give way to all traffic ...
I'm surprised by that as I would have assumed that harbour authorities would normally dictate that, in the absence of ColRegs, ad-hoc traffic would have to give way to scheduled ferries.
Rules for ferries vary. The chain ferry at Poole used to have to give way to everyone, but they changed it after an accident as the MCA reckoned it was simpler for the ferry to just go and everyone else work around it. The ferry at Cowes used to be give-way although I have a feeling that might have changed too.
I'm not sure of the rule for the Gosport ferry, but de-facto he just goes
Pete
The rule on Dutch inland waters is 'pleasure craft yield to professional traffic'.
The rule on Dutch inland waters is 'pleasure craft yield to professional traffic'.
I take it the ferries are professional, and given the speed at which the Amsterdam ferries travel, I am not inclined to test that assumption.
John, it is indeed a rule that pleasure craft give way to professional craft. But only on inland waters.
Within the professionals, the ferries trump everybody else. They always have right of way.
From which I assume that you occasionally collide with them?I try to work on the assumption that "Might is Right" and keep out of the way of anything bigger than me. It doesn't always work though, particularly with the IoW car ferries.
Apologies if you've already seen this , but it might be worth a second look.![]()
Local convention or actually written down? I come back to my previous post in which I point out I am sometimes at sea professionally on what appears to be a pleasure boat and sometimes I'm on the water for pleasure on what appears to be a work boat. How is the 'professional' user supposed to know what rule to apply and what to ignore?
Such a local rule actually ends up with more confusion IMHO but I'm not going to tell the Dutch how to manage their waterways.