Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Right Of Way Rules ...p1... Yes you should study this!

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Recently our lesson page on Right-Of-Way mysteriously disappeared. This is our replacement page.

The concept “Right-Of-Way” can be applied to any & all vehicles, not just boats.

Avoids collisions

Keeps flow of traffic orderly & efficient


Imagine if there were no stoplights or traffic signals on our busy roads & highways. This would be unsafe, to put it mildly. Drivers using caution and curtesy could avoid wrecks, but it would be much slower and less reliable.

The phrase Right Of Way means that in any situation, the vessel (or any vehicle) -with- "right of way" has the right to continue on her way. The other one in the situation should take avoiding action: turn or slow down (or both).


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How about ships? This scene of a battleship ramming an ocean liner is fictional, but maritime collisions are serious and almost always incur fatalities.







One of the most famous collisions occurred to the luxury liner ANDREA DORIA (link). Here is a gruesome story(link) of two battleships colliding during WW2, told by a US Navy sailor who was aboard. But this is not just old history, collision between ships occur nowadays too.



The Right-Of-Way Rules are also sometimes called the "Rules Of The Road" even though we are talking about boats and ships. These rules begin with some common sense


  • Every vessel must maintain a proper look-out
  • Every vessel must keep their speed within safe limits 
  • Every vessel must avoid collision when necessary
These first 3 should be easy for everyone to remember. 

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The Right-Of-Way Rules makes sense because they place the obligation to avoid or dodge on whichever vessel is best able to. 

Here is the priority list of vessels granted Right-Of-Way. Any vessel lower down the list must give way to (ie dodge them safely) any vessel higher on the list.
  • A- Vessels not under command
    • Any vessel that is unable to maneuver... anchored, docked, disabled, capsized... this does NOT include ignorance or incompetence of the sailors aboard.
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  • B- Vessels restricted in their ability to maneuver
    • Means a vessel that is difficult to maneuver because of the type operation of the vessel. Examples: a tugboat pulling barges, a dredge, any craft carrying out a rescue.
    • A vessel "constrained by draft" ie one that sticks down deep in the water, and cannot steer off course because of the risk of running aground (easy in small sailboats, huge problem for ships & larger motorboats) 











  • C- Vessels being overtaken 
Sailboat "B" has the Right-Of-Way over "A" in this diagram. Sailboat "A" is astern of "B" and if she is passing (overtaking) then she must keep clear or dodge "B"
















  • D- Fishing vessels with gear deployed
    •  This means commercial trawlers and vessels handling long-lines & seine nets, not sport or recreational fishermen.
















  • E- Manually Propelled Vessels















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  • F- Sailing vessels... with the exceptions noted above, sailing vessels have Right-Of-Way over motor vessels.
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    • Sailing vessel on Starboard Tack has Right-Of-Way over another sailing vessel on Port Tack
    • (diagram) Sailing vessel to leeward of another sailing vessel has R-O-W over the one to windward.... ie on her upwind side












  • G- Vessels CROSSING another vessels course from their starboard side
Here we see boats' "running lights" which are used at night to show other vessels. The vessel on the right is crossing from starboard, and has the Right-Of-Way. The vessel to port alters course to avoid a close call. You can see where the idea of red & green lights to control traffic came from!






  • H- Power driven vessels... or you may call them "motorboats"
    • Power driven vessels give way to sail or manually powered ones, with the exceptions granted in rules above
    • A sailboat with an auxiliary engine is "power driven" under the rules when her engine is running


Some of these rules grant right-of-way based on the TYPE of vessel (canoes over motorboats etc), some grant right-of-way based on the relative positions of the vessels (overtaking etc). But they are arranged in order such that the vessel which is least able to keep clear of the other gets right-of-way.


Finally we have a couple of rules which don't need numbers. Like the first 3 rules, they are just common sense codified into legal form, and they are always in force.

  • Every vessel must display or sound appropriate signals
    • running lights at night
    • fog horn
    • "day shapes"





  • Every vessel must come to the aid of any vessel or persons in distress  
    • Skippers are -not- required to endanger themselves, their crew, or their vessel, but it is illegal as well as morally repulsive to ignore anothers' emergency.

 Let's see how this all works out in practice.

How about if you see a canoe while you are sailing one of our FJs or Javelins? 'Manually Propelled Vessels' are above 'Sailing Vessels' on the list, so you must dodge the canoe safely. They have Right-Of-Way!

What if you are sailing fast on a windy day, and you are coming up behind a slow motorboat? Sailboats generally have Right-Of-Way over motorboats, but there are some exceptions and this is one..... an overtaking vessel must always make sure to pass safely. How about a sailboat crossing a motorboats course? The motorboat would have to steer clear of the sailboat.




Are these “real” rules?

Navigation Rules and regulations for prevention of collision are embodied in U.S. Law (33 USC 1802-1806)

Can anybody get a book of the Navigation Rules?

It’s over 160 pages, available on the WWWeb; one good source of info is the Navigation Center of the U.S. Coast Guard… www.navcen.uscg.gov

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...  written & posted by Assistant Coach Douglas King



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Back from Spring Break... Good day of SAILING!!

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Those cadets who came back from Spring Break ready to sail got a very nice gift from the weather. Sunny skies, and a perfect breeze.

Here we see Coach Jackson gently reminding his students how to rig up a Javelin.








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Putting the rudder on a Javelin













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Coach Murphy's cadets have their boat rigged and ready to shove off... the cadet at the helm is practicing steering with the hiking stick, which is the right way to do it.












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The 5O5 has all the same basic parts, plus a few extras. And the sails are MUCH bigger. Unfortunately we suffered a broken part on the shroud tension adjuster, which kept us from sailing this boat today. It's all fixed now and will be ready for some of the advanced cadets to try handling the spinnaker.







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Here we see our new coach, Coach Brittany, practicing on the Javelin with Coach Rezab and one of the advanced cadets.

In the background is New Bern's old grain silo, a prominent landmark but many people have forgotten (or never knew) what it is or how important it was to the local economy.







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Okay, sailing is done for today. We had some successful practice, and some of the beginners completed a drill. This is very good because the semester is drawing to a close and we will not have many more chances to complete the drills to complete the sailing qualification.



...  posted by Assistant Coach Douglas King




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Tuesday, April 8, 2014

More bad weather...

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This spring we have had very bad luck with the weather. Unfortunately we have only had the chance to go sailing twice, and this Monday was another example of NOT sailing.

Exercise- out on the lawn practicing what we -would- do if we were sailing. What direction is the wind? If you are on course from the red buoy to the green, what point of sail are you on? If you turn at the red buoy and head towards the blue buoy, what maneuver must you make? Which way does the tiller move, what about the sheets? Until you can figure all this out easily, you are not prepared to skipper a sailboat.... especially not in strong winds and rough water.

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Here is Coach King beginning the  main lesson for today- the Right-Of-Way Rules.

This is jumping a little ahead, but we need to know this by the end of the semester so it is a productive use of our time.







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The cadets are fascinated by Coach King's dazzling presentation... zzz-zzzz

Actually the advanced sailors needed a refresher, and the beginners seemed to pick up the rules fairly well by the end of class.








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"It's far better to be on shore wishing you were at sea, than to be at sea praying to get to shore."



Knowing how to sail skillfully is very good, and knowing when -not- to go out one of the most important skills


... posted by Assistant Coach Douglas King



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