Robin
Well-Known Member
So what would you do in the following situation?
You are sailing north mid channel at 4 knots through the non TSS west bound shipping lane cutting through the lane about 10 to 20 degrees off a right angle because you want to end up at the Needles and not Poole or Weymouth. You have max daylight visibility range. Sea state moderate.
After a quiet period 4 AIS targets appear. Bearing at CPA indicates the first 3 ships will pass either side 10 to 20 minutes from now at ranges of less than 0.7nm. A 4th more distance ship is travelling 10 kts faster than the first 3 ships and time to CPA is 30 minutes.
Over the next 20 minutes the CPA of the 4th ship bounces around between 0.2nm and 0.1nm and the bearing@CPA indicates you will pass just ahead. By the time the first 3 ships have passed things are getting tight and you doubt the 4th ship has picked you up over the past 20 minutes because it has not nudged the heading to open up the CPA.
You are also concerned the 4th ship's crew is distracted by another sailing yacht 1/2 a mile south of you under spinnaker. It is 2pm BTS on a sunny day and you reason that from the ship's perspective you might be lost in the sparkle of reflected light off the sea surface on the ship's port side.
You left Cameret 29 hours previously and have singlehanded through the night. Your brain is a bit groggy and your 420 sq ft main sail is held out via a boom preventer set on a port tack to catch the fickle SW wind.
What now skipper? Demonstrate your faith in 100% adherence to ColRegs.
First and foremost since as you have said the visibility is good use your EYES and don't rely on an AIS computer game.
You are under sail so strictly are stand on vessel but don't go closer in front of a ship than you are happy with. The ship might well be happy with a smaller CPA than you (more stable platform) but that doesn't mean you should assume that, or even that they have seen you.
Now using MK1 eyeballs are you already directly in the path of the ship like head on, masts in line, or not yet there? Do you have time to harden up and increase speed under sail and also cross nearer to 90 degs farther ahead of the ship, even though that is a turn to port since you are still under sail? Could you use some engine on your current course to speed up the crossing? Both suggestions excluded immediately if it means crossing too close (your call how far) ahead of a ship. Otherwise gybe and go south out of the way, pass behind the ship or just heave to until the ship is clear, your preventer line WAS rigged for easy slipping wasn't it?
IRPCS do say as stand on vessel you should take action when it is apparent the other vessel isn't. At no times do IRPCS say stand still and get anihilated!
I don't see any conflict with IRPCS here, just a question of timing and which alternative option to take once you have decided action is required by you in order not to cross too close ahead.