OGITD
Well-Known Member
And any crew that disagree with the Captain..
And! .... abusive or extremely grumpy personnel including the Captain ....
And any crew that disagree with the Captain..
Never done any yacht voyages long enough to preclude taking all gash ashore. Similarly, such voyages are mostly in coastal waters where marpol says no dumping anything. Only thing I tend to send overboard is liquid food (soup, gravy, custard, etc) left in the saucepan after dinner. Small bin bags, each one tied up after dinner each day, then all stored together in a big tough outer bag. Admittedly haven't figured out yet where this will go on the new boat. Possibly the anchor locker?
Unless you have a grey-water holding tank, tipping the tealeaves down the sink or overboard would amount to the same thing ....
Best avoided. The bag splits, the anchor locker drains become blocked, the locker fills in a seaway and eventually water finds its way over the top of the bulkhead and into the forepeak, which results in a soggy bed for someone.
Never actually managed it myself, but have seen the results.
Same here, almost everything but never plastic. Logic being that an occasionalAgree. Have made a number of voyages over 3 weeks on yachts. To retain waste that's heaving in a tropical climate will be at a large health risk to the crew. Stand fast plastics.
It's better to arrive with no gash but all of your crew. Less fuss!
Where do you stand on this issue, and what do you do in practice?
That is not logical!Since I don't really have the space aboard to store bags of trash offshore pretty much everything bar plastic goes over the side. I try by and large to adhere to MARPOL.
I also believe offshore winds contribute greatly to the plastic bits floating around the coast - it's not all us boaties' fault.
I know a man who has deep-sixed not one but two washing machines . . .
For ourselves, we wil finally be disposing of our ancient mouldering flares over the side this year, as all sensible attempts to find another solution have failed.
We try to keep everything bagged and lob it into the rib (on davits) until landfall, the only drawback being seagulls if a bag is damaged.
However, in the old days I believed aluminium cans were OK to dump as they would become homes to hermit crabs and then eventually fizz away to nothing - like aluminium deck fittings.
Some food bits - eg. melon skins, were frowned upon as they seem to last forever in brine. NEVER plastic or oily stuff.
I also believe offshore winds contribute greatly to the plastic bits floating around the coast - it's not all us boaties' fault.