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Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 350

Container Ships and the Cruising Sailor – Part 3

by Nancy Knudsen on 27 May 2007
Sailboat and ship SW
We’ve talked about the difficulties of yachts meeting container ships in Parts 1 and 2. But surely, all else failing, a container ship will be able to see a yacht on radar – especially if the yacht has a good radar reflector? This is an idea, understandably, often expressed, but is far from the truth, as the following small story will illustrate.

So there we were, somewhere northwest of Darwin, on our way to Ashmore Reef.
Lazy day, sunshine, great visibility, wind behind us, lunchtime.
‘Ya reckon that container ship is on a collision course?’
‘Which one?’
‘The one on our starboard bow, about 1.00 o’clock, about three miles away’
‘O the BIG red one’
‘Yup’
‘Watch it for a minute’
Silence while we wait for the ship to shift angle…... No shift.
‘I reckon he’s going to hit us in about 10 minutes’
‘OK,’ I spring up, ‘changing course’
But the Skipper is either bored, or there’s a perverseness in the air today. ‘Just wait a minute, engine is meant to give way to sail, isn’t it?’
Sigh…. ‘You’ll never get an answer’
‘Maybe…’
‘Red container ship on our starboard bow, this is yacht Blackwattle on Channel 16’
Very surprisingly, we do get an answer, and quickly.
‘Station calling Windhoven, please come in.’ It’s an Italian accent.
‘Windhoven, this is yacht Blackwattle, do you read me.’
‘Yes, Blackwater, I read you – where are you?’
‘We’re on your port bow, and we believe we are on a collision course’
‘Just a minute, I can’t see you. Stand by’
We wait.
‘Blackwater, Windhoven’
‘Windhoven this is Blackwattle – can you see us now?’
‘No – ah - I have a very small target on the port bow on my radar – is that you?’
‘Probably Windhoven. This is the Indian Ocean. We think we are the only vessel on your port bow, although we would rather not think of ourselves as a target. Could you change course please’
‘Blackwater this is Windhoven – could you repeat?’
‘We are on a collision course and I asked you to change course.’
Pause.
‘We are a very large vessel Blackwater Sir’
‘Yes I can see that. However,’ and now the Skipper is smiling, ‘the rule of the sea is that motor is meant to give way to sail, Captain, so could you change course please?’
Now there’s a another silence.
‘Blackwater this is Windhoven.’ Very polite. ‘Er, it takes us five miles to alter course. Maybe you could be so understanding and change course for us please?’
‘Very well, Windhoven, with the greatest of reluctance, we shall change course.’
‘Thank you Blackwater Sir, have a good day’
‘Thank you Captain and the same to you.’
We change course quickly and get to hell out of there.


This story illustrates the reality of a simple situation at sea. We would never suggest that one shouldn’t carry radar, as it only has to save one collision and it has more than done its work. However, they should not be relied upon for making the yacht’s presence known to a passing ship. This is because, according to ship’s captains, except in conditions of poor visibility such as fog or rain, no constant radar watch is kept on a merchant ship. Quite frequently the radar is not even switched on at sea in clear weather.

Even if it is switched on, there are conditions that militate against the ship seeing a yacht.

DISTANCE OF VISIBILITY:
To obtain maximum range a radar scanner is normally set high above the deck, the range obtainable being dependent upon the height of the scanner. It is obtained by the formula 2.2 times the square root of the height of the scanner in feet, gives the radar range in nautical miles. (This is a handy calculation, but means that you need to recalculate into feet if you are using metres.)

So say an island is 200 feet high, it would produce an echo on the screen of a radar set that had a scanner height of 125 feet at a range of 55.6 miles, provided the range of the radar extended that far and the island was large enough. Theoretically a yacht 40 feet high from the same radar set would be radar visible for about 38 miles. However, that is only theory, as the yacht blip would be far too small to be seen. A distance of around 10 miles in excellent radar conditions is about all that could be expected due to the yacht size.

ASPECT OF THE YACHT:
Much depends upon the aspect of the yacht and its radar reflecting properties. A yacht beam-on to the ship would produce a far better echo than end on, and probably a steel or ferro-cement hull would produce a better echo than a wooden or fibreglass hull.

SEA CLUTTER:
As the range diminishes so the echoes increase in the frequency of the ‘paint’ on the screen and become more visible to the observer, BUT the return from the sea clutter also increases in all but the calmest seas and this sea clutter tends to hide small blips in the ocean. As the anti-clutter control is increased to diminish the clutter, so the return echoes of small blips are easily missed in even moderate conditions. Should it be raining heavily then it is almost guaranteed that the small craft will not be seen, as in these circumstances even large vessels frequently disappear. Any yachtie who has used radar for tracking storms at sea will be able to confirm that any number of large ships could be masked by a decent size storm on the radar. (This is another excellent reason to avoid storms that show up on radar at sea).

CLOSE PROXIMITY:
Some ships have both a high mounted scanner for normal use at sea and a smaller and lower mounted scanner for use in harbours and proximity to ports where in fog it might be necessary to pick out navigation buoys, beacons, wharves and traffic at close quarters. But at sea, the larger set is nearly always used to give the maximum range for navigational purposes.

So, if a small craft is in close proximity to a ship at sea with a high radar scanner then the beam from the radar can pass OVER the yacht.


Use of Radio

One of the most common complaints of cruising sailors - the one that you hear repeated over and over during sundowners - is the experience of calling ships and receiving no reply. Of course, VHF should be turned on and the distress frequency Channel 16 should be monitored at all times. (AND the three minutes of silence on the half hour)


This is recommended internationally, but it is not yet MANDATORY and unfortunately many ships turn radio off when away from ports. So while it is a wonderful safety device in many ways, it takes ‘two to tango’. First, the sets must both be turned on, and second there must be a common language with which to communicate. Now there is usually someone on a ship who can speak English, but they may not be on the bridge at the time that you call, and sadly, when this is the case, the watchman frequently simply ignores the call. Even if he wishes, in good faith, to answer, it may take some time to locate, and even wake, the English-speaking officer. In these circumstances, it is clear that a yacht should not ever depend on a quick answer from a ship.

Another difficulty in getting a ship to answer is that often they won’t answer because they don’t know they are being called. It’s not much use calling ‘ship on my port bow’ (as in the story above) – the port bow of WHAT? VHF, with line of sight range, can easily have a range of 30 miles, and sometimes freak conditions can give a much greater range. 30 miles is nearly three thousand square miles, and in busy shipping lanes there could be many ships within the area. It is much better to either give an approximate GPS position, or, if not in the open ocean, to say ‘ship 5 miles northeast of Point Carter’. Obviously, the best situation is to know the name of the ship, and where possible (ie, with binoculars or, better, an AIS receiver) the ship’s name should be used.

The other unfortunate issue, which causes many of the above problems, is that of ships sailing under ‘Flags of Convenience’. These ships are saving money in the world of merchant shipping by employing less trained crew. This means that, if there is someone on watch, it may be only one crew, they may be poorly trained, and they may be too busy with assigned activities to keep a proper watch.

In the Part 4 of ‘Container Ships and the Cruising Sailor’ we shall discuss some of the issues surrounding the dangers to sailing boats when encountering a large ship in shallow or confined waters, the wind effects when in close proximity, and we’ll suggest two great products to assist in watch keeping and encounters with merchant shipping.

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