Woodlouse
Well-Known Member
Agreed with what you said until I got to the bit about nobodies fault.
It's very difficult to decide where to place the blame though. Is the Captain at fault? Maybe. But maybe he never got the message. The bird watchers could certainly have done more. Telling a single member of crew, emailing the US coastguard and calling the cruise company when you finally get home doesn't really smack of any sense of urgency. It's my understanding that the Captain on these ships is not a figure who is difficult to find. He dines with the passengers most nights doesn't he?
As for sighting a small boat that far off land, it really isn't that unusual in that part of the world. Fishermen there routinely go hundreds of miles offshore in boats that you or I would think twice about crossing a duck pond in.Another point is that the sighting was 130 miles from land. One would like to think that any experienced captain, told of a sighting of a small open boat, possibly in distress, so far from land, would investigate properly. The ship is flag of convenience registered in Bermuda, where little or no attempt appears to be made to regulate shipping or investigate such matters, so we may never learn the truth.
Bermuda is flag of convenience for tax. Other regulations will follow the UK line with few additions.