markpierce
Master and Commander
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2010
- Messages
- 12,557
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Carquinez Coot
- Vessel Make
- penultimate Seahorse Marine Coot hull #6
The dock*crane lifted the Coot onto the dock.* We had time to see if the engine started, put out fenders, and load lunch and tools onboard.* The boat was left attached to the crane lines while we drove a mile or so to*Jack London Square to board the chase boat.* When the chase boat arrived back at the ship, they lifted the Coot from the dock to place it in the water where we detached the crane lines.*Per wrote:
The boat was craned off directly from the YM ship into the water using the YM onboard crane or a dock crane?
Did you have to deal with longshoremen?
How did the customs clearance process work out? No customs inspections etc?
The wharf/crane crew were waiting for U.S. Inspections when we left for the chase boat.* Presumably, Customs arrived and cleared the boat between the time we left and later returned with the chase boat.* The Coot*remained*connected to the crane for nearly an hour.
The local Yang Ming (shipping line) representative was ever-present.* He had given advance notice to port security personnel.* We met him at the dock's security gate, we signed in, and then he drove us to the ship and escorted us onto the YM Cypress where we waited 2+ hours in the officers' lounge awaiting unloading.* He drove us back to the security gate, we signed out, and then drove in our car to the chase boat.
The shipping line dealt with the longshoremen.* We had no direct involvement.* All contact with security and shipping-line personnel/crew/officers was courteous.
I had a local customs broker handle the paperwork end, and he filed all the required forms.**His fee was modest, but the bonding fee*and customs charge were significant.
-- Edited by markpierce on Monday 6th of June 2011 12:18:25 PM