Seagreen
Well-Known Member
This may turn into a bit of a rant about power boat owners, but I just can't keep this to myself. Has anything similar happened to other boat sailors?
Gripe No.1
So, last sunday afternoon off Dartmouth. Flat calm, bright sun, blue, blue sky. Unusually, I'd actually managed to get all my light weather sails up. At this point I should say 'Cleone' is a gaff yawl, with jackyard and jib topsail, so lots of string and quite impressive from a distance with all her slap on.
Anyhow, there were quite a number of powerboats returning from all points, mostly heading back to Torbay when I spot one heading straight for me and doing some 25 knots. Heading straight for me, not even slightly past at high speed as is usual for most of these things.
I grab the airhorn and give him 5 short blasts, at which point he slows to 10 knots and passes about 100 feet astern, asking "are you all right?"
I may not be very up to speed on the colregs, but I don't remember 'not moving (fast)' as being a distress signal. Ok, he had a couple of kids on board, and coming over to have a look is fine by me, but charging up staright at me at high speed was irresponsible.
On a similar note, gripe no.2
Nearly saw a windsurfer killed last week, as having fallen off in the run of the river Exe past Exmouth beach, a fast racing powerboat was heading toward him in a narrow tidal channel, where the speed limit is 10 knots.
This powerboat was doing about 40 knots. It passed 12 feet this side of the surfer in the water and us by 40 feet. It didn't slow down, or appear to have altered course much to avoid either me or the windsurfer.
OK rant over. A case for reporting these to CHIRPS or are cases of powerboat pigheadedness too numerous to mention?
Mac (seething)
Gripe No.1
So, last sunday afternoon off Dartmouth. Flat calm, bright sun, blue, blue sky. Unusually, I'd actually managed to get all my light weather sails up. At this point I should say 'Cleone' is a gaff yawl, with jackyard and jib topsail, so lots of string and quite impressive from a distance with all her slap on.
Anyhow, there were quite a number of powerboats returning from all points, mostly heading back to Torbay when I spot one heading straight for me and doing some 25 knots. Heading straight for me, not even slightly past at high speed as is usual for most of these things.
I grab the airhorn and give him 5 short blasts, at which point he slows to 10 knots and passes about 100 feet astern, asking "are you all right?"
I may not be very up to speed on the colregs, but I don't remember 'not moving (fast)' as being a distress signal. Ok, he had a couple of kids on board, and coming over to have a look is fine by me, but charging up staright at me at high speed was irresponsible.
On a similar note, gripe no.2
Nearly saw a windsurfer killed last week, as having fallen off in the run of the river Exe past Exmouth beach, a fast racing powerboat was heading toward him in a narrow tidal channel, where the speed limit is 10 knots.
This powerboat was doing about 40 knots. It passed 12 feet this side of the surfer in the water and us by 40 feet. It didn't slow down, or appear to have altered course much to avoid either me or the windsurfer.
OK rant over. A case for reporting these to CHIRPS or are cases of powerboat pigheadedness too numerous to mention?
Mac (seething)