Frank Holden
Well-Known Member
I appear to have been guilty of a 'bold assumption'.... I assumed she was struggling to get off the berth in a rising wind... I've almost been caught in that situation a few times.
That said ... I wonder if she was caught by an increase in wind speed on arrival and found her self 'under tugged'.
Dunno.
Reminds me of the exam room... 2nd mates orals
Examiner ' you have to swing your ship off the berth... the winds starts to freshen..what would you do?'
Candidate ' Call for a tug'
Examiner 'Wind has freshed a bit more...'
Candidate ' I'd call for another tug'
.. 'Its now blowing a full gale'
..'I'd call for 2 more tugs'
..'Where are you getting all these tugs from?'
..'Same place you're getting all that wind'.....
And the three Golden Rules of ship handling..
A stopped ship is a drifting ship.
Never approach anything at a speed greater than you wish to hit it.
Make speed your friend.
The pilot in this case didn't quite get the mix correct...
That said ... I wonder if she was caught by an increase in wind speed on arrival and found her self 'under tugged'.
Dunno.
Reminds me of the exam room... 2nd mates orals
Examiner ' you have to swing your ship off the berth... the winds starts to freshen..what would you do?'
Candidate ' Call for a tug'
Examiner 'Wind has freshed a bit more...'
Candidate ' I'd call for another tug'
.. 'Its now blowing a full gale'
..'I'd call for 2 more tugs'
..'Where are you getting all these tugs from?'
..'Same place you're getting all that wind'.....
And the three Golden Rules of ship handling..
A stopped ship is a drifting ship.
Never approach anything at a speed greater than you wish to hit it.
Make speed your friend.
The pilot in this case didn't quite get the mix correct...