prr
Well-Known Member
The Race organizers, Royal Yacht somthing or other ( the real villians in this case ) need to communicate with VTS & Soton pilots not the other way round. Also an RN officer who wont take a risk should be sacked.....
I would argue that you need simpler rules such as I suggested, NOT more complex rules.
Having sailed down your gaff I was stressed and unrelaxed. My yacht is insured as a 'pleasure craft', and that was not pleasurable, so my assumption is that the insurance was thus invalidated?
Cowes week has been organised by Cowes Combined Clubs, which latterly became Cowes Week Limited, since 1964 - it includes representations from all the Cowes clubs not just the RYS. They consult with and provide risk assessments for all the harbour authorities as well.The Race organizers, Royal Yacht somthing or other ( the real villians in this case ) need to communicate with VTS & Soton pilots not the other way round. Also an RN officer who wont take a risk should be sacked.....
The Race organizers, Royal Yacht somthing or other ( the real villians in this case ) need to communicate with VTS & Soton pilots not the other way round.
I was out a 2011 on the Saturday (my first time seeing cowes week fromt he water) and it was SOO crowded out there. I was suprised to see so many ships coming in that afternoon and wondered if ABP were pushing luck a little as it is only one weekend of the year. They could have timed movements a little more sympathetically.
That's only ever going to happen if the Cowes Week organisers shoulder the penalty payments and associated costs of delaying commercial shipping!
That's only ever going to happen if the Cowes Week organisers shoulder the penalty payments and associated costs of delaying commercial shipping!
The Tanker Pilot OOW and Master while not charged are far from innocent. Not enough evidence not guilty.
Just a little extra to ponder. My understanding is that the entire crew were RN officers, some entitled to wear far more gold braid than the skipper. Yet none of them seems to have appreciated that they were standing into considerable danger. Perhaps a touch of the Nelsonian "Steer for the sound of the guns"?
maybe thats his defence?
If his crew outranked him and one of them said "go for it", would he then have to disobey a senior officer? maybe he's trying to offload the blame on to one if them, or get the issue turned over to martial law instead of civil. I wonder if the martial law applies to an RN crew in and RN boat in civil circumstances.
Why should they? Commercial shipping doesn't own the sea or have rights to payments from leisure sailors any more than haulage contactors own the roads and have rights to payments from leisure drivers.
maybe thats his defence?
If his crew outranked him and one of them said "go for it", would he then have to disobey a senior officer? maybe he's trying to offload the blame on to one if them, or get the issue turned over to martial law instead of civil. I wonder if the martial law applies to an RN crew in and RN boat in civil circumstances.
Popcorn at the ready.
Wasn't there some question mark over the sound signal given by the container ship?
This Sunday outside Cowes a large container vessel gave 8 blasts. You'd think they would get it right.
Wasn't there some question mark over the sound signal given by the container ship?
This Sunday outside Cowes a large container vessel gave 8 blasts. You'd think they would get it right.
Wasn't there some question mark over the sound signal given by the container ship?
This Sunday outside Cowes a large container vessel gave 8 blasts. You'd think they would get it right.
Getting back to the yacht in question, I understand there were only two on board who thought they weren't going to hit the ship. The skipper and the tactician. Everyone else was convinced they would hit. (Inside knowledge.)