So, my wife and I were anchored in Landing Cove at Santa Barbara Island late one afternoon in August with a companion boat anchored some distance away from us. We were the only boats there. Conditions were hazy with less than 10 n.mi. visibility. It was less than an hour before dark when a 17' open sportfisher w/console and two souls (guy and gal) aboard sped past us heading south grinning ear to ear. Several minutes later it returned, slowed down, and putted by our stern. The guy shouts: "Is this San Clemente Island?" [San Clemente Island lies about 45 n.mi. SSE of Santa Barbara Island.] "No--Santa Barbara Island." "Where's that?" "About 46 n.mi. west of San Pedro." "Where's Catalina Island from here?" I tell the guy that Two Harbors at the Isthmus is 25 n.mi. east, bearing approx. 90 deg [T]. The two chat a few minutes and conclude that they cannot make it that far by dark. So the guy asks if it would be safe to spend the night. Turns out that on that particular day the wind was light and sea fairly calm, and no unhappy weather forecast except for a cool overnight low--I said I thought so. He asks where he should anchor. I inquired the amount of anchor rode he had aboard--about 100 ft--so I pointed to a spot about 150 ft away in 30 ft of depth and told him to pay it all out and secure well; he had no depth finder. As they had expected to reach Avalon to camp they had food, sleeping bags, and spare fuel aboad. For sleeping they made quarters in the bow forward of the console.
At this point I began to wonder about my responsibility "to assist" other mariners "in distress." The guy was anchored on short scope at a remote island, at night, in low visibility, in an open boat lacking navigation instruments and materials; he with an apparent inability to run a compass course to a distant destination. I told my wife I thought I might have a "legal" responsibility to look out for them overnight; even take them aboard if the conditions deteriorated. But did I??
The next morning at dawn they started hauling anchor. I motioned the guy over to inquire how he got into this situation. Apparently, they had left San Pedro for Avalon, so they thought, which explains why he thought he had missed that SE corner of Catalina Island and ended up at San Clemente Island. Instead, he had gone by the NW corner and found Santa Barbara Island by chance. The low visibility kept him from seeing the west end of Catalina as he sped by it more than 30 n.mi. off his true course. The next "stop" would have been San Nicolas Island, another 20 n.mi. west.
I gave him a compass (i.e., magnetic) heading to the west end of Catalina and told him to STAY ON IT, and after 10 n.mi. he should be able to see the island. I also coached him and the girlfriend on how to use the VHF, about which they evidently had no clue, and what to tell the Coast Guard about their location, etc., if they got into [more] trouble. I then monitored my VHF16 at anchor for the next two hours.
So my question--was there in fact a "legal" responsibility to "assist" beyond what I did; or even to do that much? It's not a matter of being a nice guy or not. What actually defines "a mariner in distress" when the mariner himself is not even aware of the trouble he is in?
At this point I began to wonder about my responsibility "to assist" other mariners "in distress." The guy was anchored on short scope at a remote island, at night, in low visibility, in an open boat lacking navigation instruments and materials; he with an apparent inability to run a compass course to a distant destination. I told my wife I thought I might have a "legal" responsibility to look out for them overnight; even take them aboard if the conditions deteriorated. But did I??
The next morning at dawn they started hauling anchor. I motioned the guy over to inquire how he got into this situation. Apparently, they had left San Pedro for Avalon, so they thought, which explains why he thought he had missed that SE corner of Catalina Island and ended up at San Clemente Island. Instead, he had gone by the NW corner and found Santa Barbara Island by chance. The low visibility kept him from seeing the west end of Catalina as he sped by it more than 30 n.mi. off his true course. The next "stop" would have been San Nicolas Island, another 20 n.mi. west.
I gave him a compass (i.e., magnetic) heading to the west end of Catalina and told him to STAY ON IT, and after 10 n.mi. he should be able to see the island. I also coached him and the girlfriend on how to use the VHF, about which they evidently had no clue, and what to tell the Coast Guard about their location, etc., if they got into [more] trouble. I then monitored my VHF16 at anchor for the next two hours.
So my question--was there in fact a "legal" responsibility to "assist" beyond what I did; or even to do that much? It's not a matter of being a nice guy or not. What actually defines "a mariner in distress" when the mariner himself is not even aware of the trouble he is in?
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