Some good ideas
Jeff,There were a few good ideas in your post. Definitely put on your life vest (mine would already be on and I have the radar). Definitely bring everyone up from down below (where I sail, you might as well leave them up, because the radar detector would probably be making noise constantly). And finally, yes, make a call on the VHF. In fact, that might be the most effective way of avoiding a serious problem at that point. A securite call with your position (you didn't try to save a few bucks on the GPS did you?) is an effective way to make sure they look a little harder to see you. Sometimes they will answer and let you know their crossing distance and if it is ahead or behind you.I think the most telling point of your post was the number of "mights". Call me cautious, but I like to know what to do, not what I might do. I've been in the fog without radar (once). Didn't like it at all. Could hear things all around me, and only get a very general sense of their relative direction. Good dead reckoning skills brought us to the other side, but I could not shake the feeling of discomfort and decided then and there that any boat that I owned that was sailed in areas or times that exposed me to low visibilty situations would be radar equipped. Consequently, I have one of the few Hunter 290's with radar (most think it overkill). It is also installed on our 356.I'm not trying to be funny here, or sarcastic. Knowing where you are, where others are, and what everyone is doing just makes good sense. I spent many years flying airplanes in stuff you might not sail in. While the radar isn't in the aircraft, the positive control is part of the process. In boats (ships), there is not positive control. We rely on our eyes, and when it gets bad, equipment, to keep us out of trouble. When all else fails, we rely on a certain amount of skill and a little luck.I worry when I see suggestions like using radar detectors in the fashion indicated. Some might think that heading off in a fog with that as their ship proximity device to be ok. That would be about the same as a pilot taking off without contacting the ATC system. Probably won't get killed or kill someone else, but might also bring down a 747.Just my humble opinion, but if you are in the fog, and have no radar information regarding nearby boats, ships, land, then everyone should already have their life vest on, probably should be on deck, a forward watch should be posted, you should be making lots of noise (fog signals come to mind), and I would be asking myself what I could have done differently to have avoided this situation. Sometimes that answer is nothing (sailboats move slow and weather can move fast), but other times the answer might make you a better Captain.I've said it here before. My first choice for safety equipment is a VHF ( I have three on my boat, two fixed, one portable), and behind that the radar. If someone held a gun to my head and told me that I had to throw one of three things overboard between my vhf, radar and gps, the gps would splash the water before you could read the end of this sentence.Respectfully submitted,Daniel Jonas (S/V Feije II)