T
timbartlett
Guest
Here's this month's puzzle:
All the best
Tim
Our hero is in a 40 foot flybridge cruiser with twin shaft-drive engines, accompanied by his wife and teenage daughter, both of whom are competent crew, but neither are physically strong.
It's dusk, on a calm summer's evening, and they are pootling gently up a wide river estuary on the last of the flood tide, when the daughter notices a biggish flybridge cruiser -- he guesses about 55 foot -- drifting in the middle of the main channel, with its anchor chain hanging straight down from the bow roller. There's no sign of anyone on board: the lights are out and the doors and hatches are shut. Calling her by VHF and by voice yields no response. There's a small marina run by the local council about a mile or so down stream, but VHF and phone calls to the harbour master get no reply apart from an answering machine saying that the office is closed until 0830.
What now, skip?
- The idea is to offer a nautical puzzle, which experienced skippers will (hopefully) find interesting or entertaining, from which the less experienced may be able to learn something, and from which we can all pick up ideas.
- The WNS skipper is a fictional character. Any resemblance to a real individual is purely accidental, except that he occasionally makes mistakes, and he is not able to make time run backwards. So having got into a situation, he can't get out of it by wishing that he had done something different.
- WNS is not a competition to see who can match some hidden but predetermined solution. Of course I have an answer in mind (you wouldn't like it if I gave you an impossible situation, would you?) But mine may not be the best or only answer.
- If you think I've missed something or given confusing information please ask for clarification.
- Attributed extracts from selected posts will appear in the next issue of MBY.
All the best
Tim