Time to dust off the Yellow

When I remember it we just shone a light into his office at Burnham as we tied up & he came out in his launch, we filled in the forms & all was hunky dory.
Except for the time he caught my crew with 4 boxes of king Edward cigars that I did not know was there, so the barsteward stripped the boat & it took the best part of a day to tidy up the mess !!!!
Now I would not bother & i doubt they would even care or have the time to care. Have to run silent on the AIS though
 
Usually at Ramsgate they came round the arrivals and you were serviced fairly quickly. On one occasion I had to go and find the bloke who gave me a lift back to the boat in his car. We were chatting happily until we got back to the boat, when he stopped chatting and went into formal mode. It was like flipping a switch.
 
As there aren't enough customs officers to police the Ferryport at Portsmouth, what are the odds that one will turn up in Gosport even two hours after you rock up.
 
Enlighten the youth! I'm guessing you had to notify customs and wait on the boat for 2 hours after entry?

Yup, see the original post. This of course would also mean a walk to the nearest phone box with the correct change. It would probably be raining.

When. I sailed Service Yachts, you were also required to phone in an arrival report. This often involved walking to the nearest phone box with the correct change. As this needed to be in (generally) Fench centimes, a visit to a bar first was often necessary to get that correct change. It would probably be raining.
 
Not heard of radar or night vision then ?!

In about 1979 we were teenagers sailing my A22; those were before the days of solar panels or wind chargers for normal coastal or cross - Channel cruisers and the outboard had no charging coil, so it was a case of lugging the battery to garages to get charged up - a ' total loss ' system, which was quite common then.

We were sailing back across Lyme Bay at night with all lights inc nav turned off to save power, relying on keeping a good lookout ourselves.

About a third of the way across the bay from Brixham a helicopter - also without lights - turned up and hovered close overhead, I could recognise the sound of a Lynx.

They were obviously using night vision to check us out, our mast having shown up on shore radar.

Judging by that it's not quite as easy for any boatload of illegals to approach UK as the Daily Mail might have you believe.
 
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Yup, see the original post. This of course would also mean a walk to the nearest phone box with the correct change. It would probably be raining.

When. I sailed Service Yachts, you were also required to phone in an arrival report. This often involved walking to the nearest phone box with the correct change. As this needed to be in (generally) Fench centimes, a visit to a bar first was often necessary to get that correct change. It would probably be raining.

Bloody hell, did then not have an app for that back then? ;)
 
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