It’s
directly on the other side of a busy shipping lane for vessels headed to the
mouth of the Mississippi, and I got to make passing arrangements with a
600-foot tanker on the way out.
This
particular unmanned platform is our customer’s most productive in the area and
we carry equipment out there on average once a month.
The
issue with the crane is a bad swing motor; we’re carrying the replacement, and
meet half a dozen production operators who have flown out to the platform.
The
first challenge is getting the boat positioned directly under the fast line so
the lift can be picked-up while the crane is in its rest. There’s a pretty good
current running into the jacket, but light wind and calm seas make that part of
the operation pretty straightforward.
Until
the operators discover the crane won’t start.
On
Channel 10: “Hey Cap, y’all wouldn’t happen to have a 12-volt jumper box on the
boat?”
“Yessir,
we sure do. Do you have somewhere to plug it in?”
“No,
we sure don’t. I guess we’d need a mighty long extension cord.”
I
eyeball the distance from the deck to the crane pedestal. Less than a boat
length, but not much. Maybe 100-120 feet. I consider how many extension cords
we have on the boat.
We
cobble together four or five extension cords and send them up on a low-tech
handline we tie to the handle of the jumper box.
A
few minutes pass as I hold the boat directly below the crane, and
simultaneously I hear a diesel engine roar to life and a ragged cheer go up
from the cluster of men on the platform.
Success.
We
offload the swing motor and set a course for our next stop, more than two hours
away.
I
am reminded of advice I once gave boaters in a hook-and-bullet magazine I then
wrote for:
Carry
jumper cables on your boat. Many otherwise fine fishing days have been ruined
by a dead battery, and for some reason most boaters don’t carry jumper cables
on board, even though they probably have them in their trucks.
This
marks the first time I’ve every jump-started a crane from a boat, but
apparently it’s not unheard of.
Telling
our other captain about the morning’s fun when he comes on watch, he recalls
the time he used an air compressor on deck to start a platform’s crane, 100
feet of air hose draped from the pedestal to the boat’s deck.
More
than one hundred miles and many hours from shore-side support, we frequently
have to find work-arounds for challenges that beg more perfect solutions.
Some
challenges, of course, can’t be adequately met out here, and for that we have
our scheduled shipyard time – scheduled, in this case, to coincide with our
biannual USCG hull inspection.
Our
office still hasn’t given us a date, but it pretty much has to be in the next
two weeks since our COI expires Nov. 18. Our work list is already three pages
long.
No comments:
Post a Comment