Dear Recreational Boater/Weekend Angler:
Please, for the love of God and the children who you need
to get off your bow and into life jackets, help me help you be safe.
I know you’ve been messing around on boats since the Yankees
recaptured Fort Livingston, but consider taking a boater education course anyhow. It takes just a few hours, costs
less than $20, and you can probably even do it online.
A boater ed course will introduce you to the Navigation Rules, from which you are not exempt simply because you trailer
your boat to the water.
These rules include such concepts as privileged (stand-on)
and burdened (give-way) vessels. You probably think of this in terms of “right-of-way,”
which is not a phrase found in the nautical lexicon.
Among the most common situations you’ll learn about are
overtaking, crossing and meeting. Here
are the basics: if we are meeting head-on, alter course to starboard as your
default action. If we are crossing, and I’m on your right, you’ll see my red
sidelight. Red means stop, or at least slow down or alter your course astern of
me.
If we are crossing and I’m on your left, just keep doing
what you’re doing and I’ll take the necessary actions to avoid a collision.
If I’m in front of you, I am the privileged vessel and you
must ask permission to come around me. The primary means to do this is by use
of a sound signaling device, but that’s cumbersome and most commercial vessels
simply make arrangements via radio.
Radios are extremely useful, and I can promise you that
commercial vessels will be both surprised and extremely pleased if you come up
on the appropriate channel and let them know your intentions. Failing that, you
can at least listen-in and hear what people are saying about you.
Inside the sea buoy, most everyone will be on VHF Channel
13. In the Gulf of Mexico, most folks will be monitoring VHF 16 in addition to
working channels. It’s entirely appropriate to hail a vessel on the appropriate
channel.
I know there’s a really deep hole in Barataria Pass where it
meets Bayou Rigaud, but it’s doubtful that’s where most of the fish are.
Regardless, it is illegal for you to anchor in the navigational channel. Please
don’t.
A close reading of the rules also will indicate that vessels
crossing the channel are the least privileged vessels on the water. Wait for
everyone to get past before you jet over to the other side.
You should know that some large boats, including mine, are
probably a lot faster than you think they are. Because larger objects appear to
be moving more slowly than they are, among other reasons, you should think
twice about cutting across (or under) a large boat’s bow.
You may be comforted by the observation that I have two
radar transmitters spinning on top of my wheelhouse. What you may not know is
that those radars are not all that good at detecting small fiberglass boats.
They’re even worse at picking up plastic kayaks.
So, to recap: take a boater’s ed course, use the radio and don’t
anchor in or cross in front of me in the channel.
I am all for you getting out and enjoying the fine weather.
I fish, I paddle and I love small boats. I’m glad you’re out here. But you’re
giving me a headache this weekend.
If we collide, chances are I won’t be injured at all, and
you may even survive unhurt. My company’s insurance will probably buy you a new
boat. But I’ll lose my job and very possibly my career. I may even go to jail.
So, please, help me help you be safe.
Sincerely,
A Crewboat Captain
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