doug748
Well-Known Member
On Tuesday I was crossing the eastern edge of Plymouth sound on route to the River Plym. This is a well trod passage used by small boats in and out of the eastern end of the breakwater and ou to sea. For those that dont know Plymouth it is a wide, protected and obsticle free patch of water, and deep.
I was motoring and preparing to come alongside. At 400 yards of so I became aware of a larger yacht on my starboard side, lettered on the hull; Plymouth School, or some such. It was coming out of the extreme end of the nearby anchorage and shaping to cross my path. I took no particular notice suspecting it would round up and come inside me on route for the mouth of the River Plym, which was about 1/3 mile distant. I was busy, he stood on, and on. I thought he might be coming alongside for a word. He was not, at the point at which a collision was almost inevitable I was forced to do a 90 then 360 turn to avoid a collision. He was making perhaps 51/2 kts me 4kts. He was coming at an oblique angle and at the time I made a correction he was in no position to avioid a collision himself.
I am aware that the rules put us both in error. My question is (feedback from instructors would be particularly helpful). Is this the way to conduct a training boat? Do we stand on regardless?
Myself, I spend my sailing life nudging my couse to avoid close situations; regaress of my standing in the rules. I assume this boat had been and was going nowhere in particular, and you can be pretty sure he would not try the same stunt with the local fishing community.
This was a flat calm day with perfect sunshine, why did he aim at me?
I was singlehanded, flying the Q flag at the end of a cross channel passage. Counts for nothing in the rules, I know, but it is ironic that at see we make a point of tring to convince large ships that we are not intending to enforce our "right of way"
What do you think? Do I need to join one of this blokes courses?
I will find this company and invite comment!
I was motoring and preparing to come alongside. At 400 yards of so I became aware of a larger yacht on my starboard side, lettered on the hull; Plymouth School, or some such. It was coming out of the extreme end of the nearby anchorage and shaping to cross my path. I took no particular notice suspecting it would round up and come inside me on route for the mouth of the River Plym, which was about 1/3 mile distant. I was busy, he stood on, and on. I thought he might be coming alongside for a word. He was not, at the point at which a collision was almost inevitable I was forced to do a 90 then 360 turn to avoid a collision. He was making perhaps 51/2 kts me 4kts. He was coming at an oblique angle and at the time I made a correction he was in no position to avioid a collision himself.
I am aware that the rules put us both in error. My question is (feedback from instructors would be particularly helpful). Is this the way to conduct a training boat? Do we stand on regardless?
Myself, I spend my sailing life nudging my couse to avoid close situations; regaress of my standing in the rules. I assume this boat had been and was going nowhere in particular, and you can be pretty sure he would not try the same stunt with the local fishing community.
This was a flat calm day with perfect sunshine, why did he aim at me?
I was singlehanded, flying the Q flag at the end of a cross channel passage. Counts for nothing in the rules, I know, but it is ironic that at see we make a point of tring to convince large ships that we are not intending to enforce our "right of way"
What do you think? Do I need to join one of this blokes courses?
I will find this company and invite comment!