Duster
N/A
These days I do not often switch the VHF on, the coastguard stations seem remote, the inshore forecast is usually excessively pessimistic and get a bit bored with listening to boaters calling friends, usually to no effect and "Jimmy fishermen" cursing and swearing, so I am out of practice in using it.
On Tuesday I was out fishing with a friend in the Gulf of Corryvreckcan when we spotted a few items floating towards us. First was an inflated but empty life jacket, then a parcel of food followed by an empty but inverted canoe. We recovered them, moved the boat out of the rather extreme tidal conditions, switched on the VHF and I called the coastguard on 16. Got told by Belfast to stand by on 67 after 10+ minutes of no reply, assuming that it to be the usual west coast indolence, I called again to be told to standby as they were casualty working elsewhere, so I waited and we carried on fishing.
Eventually they came back to me, I explained what we had found, where and when etc. They had no reports of the items lost or anyone missing and decided to call a full Mayday and called out the Coastguard helicopter and the Islay lifeboat.
After half an hour or so of searching, they stood down the search and we got a report from them that the owner had been found and was safe. A young man phoned me the next morning to arrange to collect his things, apparently he was alone, had capsized near the shore, got very cold, struggled to swim in his life jacket so abandoned it, managed to get ashore on Jura (which is very sparsely populated) and had a long walk to find help.
It occurred to me later that had it been a true emergency, my patient approach might have cost critical time. Should I have called it in as a "Security" or just ignored the request to standby, talked over the top of them and relayed what I had found on 16?
What would you have done?.....me for future I've put the Coastguard phone number into my phone.
Regards mikej
On Tuesday I was out fishing with a friend in the Gulf of Corryvreckcan when we spotted a few items floating towards us. First was an inflated but empty life jacket, then a parcel of food followed by an empty but inverted canoe. We recovered them, moved the boat out of the rather extreme tidal conditions, switched on the VHF and I called the coastguard on 16. Got told by Belfast to stand by on 67 after 10+ minutes of no reply, assuming that it to be the usual west coast indolence, I called again to be told to standby as they were casualty working elsewhere, so I waited and we carried on fishing.
Eventually they came back to me, I explained what we had found, where and when etc. They had no reports of the items lost or anyone missing and decided to call a full Mayday and called out the Coastguard helicopter and the Islay lifeboat.
After half an hour or so of searching, they stood down the search and we got a report from them that the owner had been found and was safe. A young man phoned me the next morning to arrange to collect his things, apparently he was alone, had capsized near the shore, got very cold, struggled to swim in his life jacket so abandoned it, managed to get ashore on Jura (which is very sparsely populated) and had a long walk to find help.
It occurred to me later that had it been a true emergency, my patient approach might have cost critical time. Should I have called it in as a "Security" or just ignored the request to standby, talked over the top of them and relayed what I had found on 16?
What would you have done?.....me for future I've put the Coastguard phone number into my phone.
Regards mikej
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