dom
Well-Known Member
Sailing west towards cape point we came across a "vessels" on AIS whose status was "Underway" when we got close we found it was a fixed gas production platform.
Son of a beach?
Sailing west towards cape point we came across a "vessels" on AIS whose status was "Underway" when we got close we found it was a fixed gas production platform.
They used to tell Solent they were doing training with a life-like dummy. That used to be on 16 for all to hear.
SCG now move them to Ch67 where the Clipper yachts report the start and end of the MOB exercises.
Those foreign bloody sand banks. Like that South African bank which refused to give way to the Clipper boat. The beach didn't even put up two balls or red over red.
SCG now move them to Ch67 where the Clipper yachts report the start and end of the MOB exercises.
How do they get temporary exemption for the IRPCS?
It sounds as if they were going very slowly for a time before it became apparent there was a collision risk?
You make many good points. On that one, though, who is stand-on and who is give-way does not depend on who was first. A sailing craft has every right to create a collision risk with a power vessel by changing course and the power vessel is then obliged to give way as usual. Of course once this collision risk has been created, the sailing craft is stand on, as usual.
Also I think in a light breeze, a close-hauled vessel 'standing on' is often on a sticky wicket if they don't head a constant course as the wind shifts.
The boundaries of how quickly a sailing vessel might reasonably expect a power vessel to alter course etc have been the subject of some late night debate around the bar. I would admit to being much surer of my precise rights under racing rules, which are much clearer about how quickly one must respond.
In the area in question, there is also the joker that as you sail off the bank outside Portsmouth, you often find about two knots of current changing your VMG as you get to the deep water.
It's rarely a dull place to sail!
I did see a clipper yacht doing a mob drill in the Solent not long ago and they did announce it on the VHF on that occasion. I wanted to try slip in and pinch their dummy but the wife wouldn't have it.
Yes, one of horrible holes in IRPCS is the failure to define things like "in good time". Two different vessels might have wildly difefrent, but equally reasonable, notions of when a risk of collision arises. ...
I think the 'horrible hole' is a feature not a bug, to ensure the Rules work for all kinds of vessels, and for 'widely different, but equally reasonable,notions'.
Agreed, as long as one makes ones' intentions very clear;
The trouble with applying this “preemptive defensive’ strategy of the COLREGS is that this will confuse the professionals who expect a vessel to stand on when it should do.
OK then ... with how long to go before impact do you consider that a risk of collision exists?