Yes. I have two of them. but they are out in the store room and I don't want to go out there- it's drizzlingCharlie. That looks like a cool old school light. Is there a manufacturer's name on it?
Yes. I have two of them. but they are out in the store room and I don't want to go out there- it's drizzlingCharlie. That looks like a cool old school light. Is there a manufacturer's name on it?
Jackdaw - how do the "little white dots" get placed on the chart? It looks like some of the boats there (outside the cluster of boats together, may in fact be anchored not on mooring balls. Should they be displaying an all around white light?Yep, but even this can be wierd. Here is the huge mooring field just off the Coconut Grove YC in Miami. Note there is no designation on the NOAA chart, but for sure these boats sit with lights off.
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Thanks, I think I have it for mooring fields in a "Special Anchorage" inside of the COLREG Demarcation line. No light required.The boundaries of these are described in Coast Pilot of the area and are drawn on the chart. In those special anchorages one is not required to display the all round light. Mooring fields can be inside of special anchorages--so, you would not have to show the light there. These are very common in Newport Harbor (CA). However, mooring fields can also be outside of special anchorages if they lie outside of the inland waters, for example. Such as the mooring fields that abound in the anchorage areas of Santa Catalina Island. Thus, if you are on a mooring inside of Newport Harbor that is inside a special anchorage--you do not need to show the light.
A black ball. However, I never see these, anywhere. And I only occasionally see boats in a mooring field not within the boundaries of a Special Anchorage with anchor lights on at night. Apparently it is widely believed they are not needed or required. True, they may not be needed there. But as I read the ColRegs, they are required. It's conceivable that one could come upon a mooring field where the there are but few, to perhaps only one vessel moored; perhaps on the edge of it. You'd want to see him.Thanks, I think I have it for mooring fields in a "Special Anchorage" inside of the COLREG Demarcation line. No light required.
My question is this (which I didn't see answered above):
What is the lighting/day shape requirement for a mooring field that is inside of the COLREGS Demarcation line (inland) that is NOT in a "special anchorage".
And I assume an "all around white light" at night then.
In most mooring fields in Europe they are totally required... moor most places in the UK without one and the harbormaster will be on your case. Often with a fine.A black ball. However, I never see these, anywhere. And I only occasionally see boats in a mooring field not within the boundaries of a Special Anchorage with anchor lights on at night. Apparently it is widely believed they are not needed or required. True, they may not be needed there. But as I read the ColRegs, they are required. It's conceivable that one could come upon a mooring field where the there are but few, to perhaps only one vessel moored; perhaps on the edge of it. You'd want to see him.
COLREGS says that you must display an all-around white light where BEST VISIBLE. So as a boat owner you have a lot of latitude as to where that is. Unless someone hits you. Then they'll 2nd guess any choice other than the mast-top.Just is it required by COLREGS in the situation described. Also note that I do and will display a USCG approved all around white light from the masthead and, based on good advice here about how high that is and ability to pick this out from the stars with a tall mast another all around white light somewhere lower as Capta and others have suggested. Thanks
@smokey73 , sorry just saw this. A nav app (Skipper) I have on the iPad does that; superimposes imagery over charts. Only in on-line mode but its cool for reviewing new areas and the like.Jackdaw - how do the "little white dots" get placed on the chart? It looks like some of the boats there (outside the cluster of boats together, may in fact be anchored not on mooring balls. Should they be displaying an all around white light?
If you're moored or anchored in fog at night in a place where the all-round light is required, then lower, nearer the deck, might be the location where it is "Best Visible." Shinning an anchor light at the mast top in fog where it might not be visible to an oncoming vessel would not get a pass if you are hit b/c that just happens to be where your fixture is. It's therefore prudent to carry another light that can be hoisted in the foretriangle in such special circumstances. Let 'em "second guess!"COLREGS says that you must display an all-around white light where BEST VISIBLE. So as a boat owner you have a lot of latitude as to where that is. Unless someone hits you. Then they'll 2nd guess any choice other than the mast-top.
There was a question asked of a maritime attorney in a SoCal publication many years ago. It had to do with a mooring field in Catalina Island which is NOT marked (or was not) as a designated anchorage/mooring field. He concluded that a boat hit while on a mooring that was not displaying a day shape or light at night would be contributory negligent. There was a vast outcry from boaters since no one ever was lit or displayed a day shape in this large mooring field.I appreciate all the discussion about location and best visibility of the light but that is not the question. It comes down to this:
Is a boat on a swing mooring (mooring buoy) in inland waters that is not in a "special anchorage" designated on the NOAA charts considered "at anchor" for purposes of the COLREGS requirement to display a 360 degree white light? I understand that in a "special anchorage" a white light and black ball day shape is not required but the question is what if not in a special anchorage.