Sea Devil
Well-Known Member
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It wasn't a court martial.
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I understand the company organising this publicity cruise flew into Tahiti a RN navigation officer two other 'officials' and having paid them and given them suitable hospitality then required them to interrogate the Skipper and Mate. They did not provide any defence council, found the skipper and crew guilty and with what could be described as a fanfare of publicity sacked them. The publicity made it very clear that in no way was the management to blame.
If the previous post is correct and the Skipper and Mate were clearly not up to the job, were making elementary mistakes for several days previously with children on board then who the hell was responsible for employing them in the first place?
If you are sending out children into dangerous waters (I spent some weeks cruising that area and found it possibly the most demanding pilotage in the whole circumnavigation,) then you should be pretty sure that the people you are entrusting the lives of trainee crew/passengers in up to the job!
What I find most worrying is not the sacking but the very public way it was done. Nobody puts a boat on a reef for fun. It must have been a very traumatic experience for the skipper and mate and the way it was handled by the employers appears to be insensitive and possibly a way of covering up their own failings in not verifying these people had the experience, knowledge ability to look after a group of youngsters whilst sailing in a very demanding place...
Michael
I confess I have not seen a full report of the incident? I have not seen the detailed findings of the 'court martial' which caused them to put the 100% blame on the couple? Have I missed something?
It wasn't a court martial.
[/ QUOTE ]
I understand the company organising this publicity cruise flew into Tahiti a RN navigation officer two other 'officials' and having paid them and given them suitable hospitality then required them to interrogate the Skipper and Mate. They did not provide any defence council, found the skipper and crew guilty and with what could be described as a fanfare of publicity sacked them. The publicity made it very clear that in no way was the management to blame.
If the previous post is correct and the Skipper and Mate were clearly not up to the job, were making elementary mistakes for several days previously with children on board then who the hell was responsible for employing them in the first place?
If you are sending out children into dangerous waters (I spent some weeks cruising that area and found it possibly the most demanding pilotage in the whole circumnavigation,) then you should be pretty sure that the people you are entrusting the lives of trainee crew/passengers in up to the job!
What I find most worrying is not the sacking but the very public way it was done. Nobody puts a boat on a reef for fun. It must have been a very traumatic experience for the skipper and mate and the way it was handled by the employers appears to be insensitive and possibly a way of covering up their own failings in not verifying these people had the experience, knowledge ability to look after a group of youngsters whilst sailing in a very demanding place...
Michael
I confess I have not seen a full report of the incident? I have not seen the detailed findings of the 'court martial' which caused them to put the 100% blame on the couple? Have I missed something?