lwarden
Guru
Are you say they were lying to the USCG about fishing which then would make you the stand on vessel?
You mean make them (the sail boat) the give way vessel?
Are you say they were lying to the USCG about fishing which then would make you the stand on vessel?
My radar stopped working a few years ago. But even back when it did work I didn't run it much on a clear night as it was power hog.
The fishing boat said he had his radar on, but it didn't pick us up. We have a LOT of metal on our boat and our 22 year radar before if died could pick out a sea buoy mile away.
We were healed and at 5 degrees at the most.
I think they are saying they were trawling for shrimp and Don was motoring- not under sail.
You mean make them (the sail boat) the give way vessel?
With his statement in the Original post:
"I noticed Open Seas motoring up on our starboard side, which was where the rigging and sails were in the water and told them to back away so they would not get tangled up in the sails/rigging. They backed off, and then left us completely and motored away. We never were able to establish VHF communication with Open Seas and by the time we got ourselves free they were distance dot of light.", it sounds like the fishing was not happening at the time of the collision. With nets out, this maneuvering wouldn't be possible.
====================================Maybe I am reading between the lines........
A thought also occurred to me, this was as close to head on collision as you can get, last minute dodge. How close did the FV have to be, so as not to be blocked by the mast, before it started to appear on one or the other side of it?
Are you say they were lying to the USCG about fishing which then would make you the stand on vessel?
Yes...sailboats are give way to fishing vessels fishing.
I am saying exactly what I have written!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Why does it seem to me you are always trying to say things to disagree with what I have written? The feeling I get from your posts is that you side with the fishing boat?
I was clarifying the statement you made in post 118 where you commented that the sailboat was the stand-on vessel, and had assumed you had misspoken.
The way I read it is the F/V reported they were fishing. If the captain was lying about fishing then the sailboat could assume they were the stand on vessel. Thus my question and that's why I asked early on what lights the F/V was displaying.
I have posted everything I know. We saw NO lights anywhere near us prior to just before the collision. NONE! To us suddenly there was fully lit up fishing boat directly in front of us.
But I feel that to you that is meaningless and that We MUST be wrong etc.
It doesn't appear to matter to you the number of people that have written of encountering a dark fishing boat, to you they don't exist.
I NEVER would ever assume I am the stand on boat while sailing and getting anywhere near a fishing boat. That is just so stupid and like arguing with a semi truck on the road.
I don't understand the Monday-morning QB'ing here. Two boats collided - that we know. Two needles in a haystack met. We can surmise all we want but that risks whisking away a learning experience. The undertone is "obviously, someone wasn't keeping adequate watch or there would be no accident. I always keep watch, therefore this would never happen to me...." Which means nothing need be learned - everyone knows they need to keep an adequate watch.
So explain something to me: Two vessels manned by experienced mariners collided. Can anyone really say that they are somehow more careful or more experienced than the crew on those two boats?
Peter
Peter, radar works well when level. Sailboats are often heeled over reducing forward vision, getting a good read on water on one side and sky on the other. Plus not many cockpits have waterproof room for displays.
I also wonder about night vision being affected by looking at a monitor.
I suspect that historically power has been a concern for sailors, so they are less likely to use radar routinely. And they typically travel at slower speeds than power boats, so perhaps the need is less generally.
None of this power inadequacy for a radar aboard a sailboat under sail means diddly to an admiralty court. The rules say if you have it, use it effectively.
I have read this thread fairly carefully, and have yet to see Don L say whether his boat was radar-equipped. I have assumed not. Am I wrong?
I think you guys are agreeing more than you realize. The F/V was invisible to you (for reasons unknown to us at the moment), yet they were claiming to the USCG that they were fishing and therefore stand on. Which considering you couldn't see them, you couldn't possibly have known at the time even if they were.
I wish I had never posted this thread here.
The fishing boat report was written by the owner as a representative. It says the Master was at the helm.
Their report is marked "Yes" to the question "Is there evidence that alcohol contributed to this causality?" Hard to believe they would say this considering they never got to within 100' of us. I wasn't going to even file a statement till I read that.
I hope for your sake this does not end up in court because you will be at a disadvantage with potential liars like that opposing you.
psneeld;1212766 For me said:Great then stop posting on the thread! I freely stated we have our share of the blame!
I am the only 1 who has given a statement to the CG who was acturally there. The owner of the fishing boat provided their statement and he wasn't even there. I tried to attach it here but it exceed the pdf file size
I am not sure really if I want the insurance to total the boat or repair, but it isn't like I have a choice.
As a curiosity, was it ever established that it was a shrimper versus dragging a trawl net a stern?
Ted
Unlikely, they didn't claim any damage. My boat is uninsured so the only injury is going to be the difference between the agreed value and the real worth. I am not sure really if I want the insurance to total the boat or repair, but it isn't like I have a choice.