L
Les Blackwell
Hello all stations,I took Gary Wyngarden's lastest skipper's quiz and missed the question on horn signals--the differrence between inland and international COLREG rules. I think Gary has been too long on Orcas Island in the San Juans and is out of touch with the rest of the cruising world (I'm teasing--Island living is great). However, I do have a question for many of you.I was a CG licesed skipper for 100 tons for many years. I spent most of my time on sailboats teaching and skippering in my local waters. I have since retired but I still hold my license in great respect because of the professions who ply our waters.I have not heard a horn signal from a commercial craft in years except during fog and the skippers tell me it is for the smaller vessels around them. As large ships come into the Puget Sound waters, they are required to contact by radio (many of them call it their phone) to either Seattle Traffic or Vancouver Traffic. Once they pick up their piloit they stay within traffic separation lanes. All communication is done by VHF radio. I have been in the wheel house of some Washington State Ferries and have talked to captains that take their jobs seriously. They tell me that they use the fog signal just to let the pleasure craft know their whereabouts. With other ferries they use the "phone" (VHF). The ferry system evan has a special channel so they can talk to each other. But I also noticed when I was aboard a ferry that the windows are closed--that they probably could not hear some of our smaller boat horns that we use if they wanted to without stopping the ferry and walking out on the deck. The only efficient way to contact the ferries or any other commercial traffic is by VHF radio.The point I'm making is that the COLREGS about horn signals is archaic and out of date. The best research I've been able to do is to find some information that these were added to the "rules" in the early nineteen hundreds after several ships hit each other coming or going out of New York harbor. Radios were not commonly used then. I have to teach horn signals for both the ASA and the USPS curriculum, but I have very little to teach about VHF radio. I think it is backwards.My question to all of you is somewaht broad. How much do you use your (air) horn when sailing? Have you heard other vessels use a horn other than for fog? Do you blow one long (do you know how long a long blast is suppose to be?) when leaving your slip? Or the harbor entrence? The COLREGS say you are suppose to do that. Have you ever contracted a commercial vessel by VHF to clafify your or his intentions.I'll look forward to hearing your answers.Les