alant
Well-Known Member
And they are in a RIB equipped with two lots of horsepower outboards that can probably outrun my 6 knot cruising speed. When I was stopped in the Channel by Border Protection they were also backed up by a big grey gunboat. But very courteous with lots of 'please' and 'sir' interspersed with their 'requests' for me to stop and allow them to board and search.
I have not yet been stopped and searched myself by the Americans but I find them an emotional contradiction when I meet their Customs/Immigration when entering the US in my own boat. I like the way that they call me Captain both on the radio and in person, but I do not like the fact that they carry sidearms. One of the great things about living in Britain is the fact that the police are not armed, at least the ones I see and meet with the exception of the airports.
All that said I believe that the Border Protection do an important job and if in doing that job occasionally it means I am stopped and searched, that I suppose is the price of freedom.
The last time I was searched was just short of Dungeness and I was surprised how excited they got when flicking through my Australian passport and interrogating me on where I had been they realised that I was in fact returning from such exotic places as Brazil and Namibia. And therefore I must be carrying refugees and if not at least arms. The fact that if I had been I could have offloaded them at my first port of call in the UK, Newlyn, doesn't seem to occur to them. At one stage when I had told them that I had had to go into Brazil as the water in my main tank was foul, I thought they were going to rip up my floor to get a better look at my main water tank. Fortunately they were happy when I was able to pump water out of the tank at the galley sink.
I've been questioned & searched, whilst at a lunch anchor in a school boat at Newtown Creek!
Burly thugs in an incognito RIB, came alongside & rudely frightened the students.
No ID, or anything to indicate who they were.