Wednesday, 9 June 2010

SPLICE THE MAINBRACE AND AHOY ME HEARTIES

I read this article in the Daily Express today & want to share it with you.



It is Seafarer’s Awareness Week and the fact that it is 70 years since Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain gives it a special poignancy.

To Shakespeare the kingdom was “this precious stone set in a silver sea, which serves it in the office of a wall, or as a moat defensive to a house, against the envy of less happier lands”. That is simple fact, if wonderfully put, and not poetic licence.

Our last conqueror William was a Norman or “Northman” with Viking blood enough to get his invasion fleet safely across the Channel to the Sussex coast. But since 1066 the sea has allowed us to remain a free people. Sir Francis Drake and the weather did for Philip of Spain’s Armada.

Napoleon fretted as he built up an invasion force at Boulogne: “Let us be masters of the Channel for six hours and we are masters of the world.” To which Admiral Jervis retorted: “I do not say the French cannot come. I only say they cannot come by sea.” Napoleon’s maritime ambitions foundered at Trafalgar long before he met his Waterloo.

Seafaring goes deeper than defence of the realm. Daniel Defoe described the British as “this ill-bred amphibious mob”, a great seaborne swill of privateers, smugglers, explorers, fishermen and chancers of all sorts, with a brilliance for doing business in great waters. Defoe of course wrote Robinson Crusoe and in reading that we absorb salt water from childhood.

No other place on earth is so rich in tales of the sea. Our literature is alive with them – Long John Silver, Captain Hook, Hornblower RN, the Rime Of The Ancient Mariner – and so is the language. To “know the ropes”, to be “under the weather”, to “pipe down”, to be “groggy” (from naval rum)…The passion for sea air, rock pools, shrimping nets and bathing saw the British invent the seaside holiday.





Brighton, Blackpol, day trippers, piers and fearsome landladies were pioneers when Florida was a swamp and the Costa Brava a string of sand dunes. By necessity the enterprise of creating the world’s greatest empire was entirely seaborne. Our sailors, foreigners complained, were incapable of passing an islet without planting a flag on it.

The men who drew up the Colonial Office list in the 1890s did not bother to tabulate all they owned, wearily ending the list: “And countless other smaller possessions and nearly all the rocks and isolated islands of the ocean.”

Seafarers reflected national morality. In the early days they were pirates and slavers. The grand Georgian terraces of Liverpool were built with the profits of the “attractive African meteor”, the coy name for the slave trade. When the moral U-turn was made in the 19th century the Royal Navy hunted down slave ships and pirates.

It was by sea that British emigrants populated Australia, Canada, New Zealand, a fair part of the US and South Africa. Millions had a last, longing glimpse of home on a boat outbound on the Clyde or the Mersey. A hundred thousand orphans sailed to Canada alone. Indians were taken by ship to Malaya, East Africa, the West Indies and Pacific islands.

More than half the world’s ships flew the Red Duster, the flag of British merchantmen. All used British Admiralty charts and calculated their longitude from Greenwich. Many were insured by Lloyd’s of London. They steamed on Welsh coal from British coaling stations.

The high days of Masefield’s “dirty British coaster with a salt-cakedsmokestack” are done. Seafarers are not. Only five per cent of cargoes imported into Britain and exported from it come by air or through the Channel Tunnel. The rest comes by sea. Less, though, in British flagged and crewed ships.

Our merchant fleet is 15th in the world rankings it dominated for so long, no more than 645 ships, half of them registered abroad. In the great ports of London and Liverpool smart apartment dwellers have replaced the swarming dockers.

Modern ports are still hugely important to the economy. They handle more than 600million tonnes of cargo a year.

Ferries and cruise ships tot up 67million passengers. Volcanic ash does not intimidate a ship. There are 12,000 fishermen at sea in UK waters. And for every fisherman at sea a further 10 jobs are created ashore. We should not forget our seafarers. In 1941 Winston Churchill spoke of the Battle of the Atlantic. Hitler’s U-boats almost starved us into submission by cutting the sea lanes and 30,000 men of the merchant navy gave their lives to stop him.

We needed to bring in a million tons of cargo a week to survive then. We need almost that much a day now. The sea and its seafarers are with us always. l Many local communities and companies are taking part in fundraising activities during Seafarers Awareness Week. Go to www.seafarers-uk.org for details.

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

WHAT'S A VPIRB?

A VPIRB (VHF Position Indicating Radio Beacon) is a Maritime Survivor Locating Device (MSLD), specifically designed to alert the parent vessel that they have lost one of their crew overboard.

In most man overboard (MOB) situations, the vessel from which the person came from is in the best position to render immediate assistance.

A VPIRB is equipped with an internal GPS receiver, and uses VHF DSC (Digital Selective Calling) and synthesised radiotelephone (voice) transmissions to broadcast this GPS position to all vessels and shore stations in range.



DSC is a very suitable technology for a MSLD, as it allows alerting of both the parent vessel, and all other DSC-equipped vessels in the immediate vicinity.

Personal Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons (EPIRBs) have saved many thousands of lives over the years; however they rely on shore infrastructure to process and then re-broadcast an alert message to ships in the vicinity of the person in distress. Depending on the location of the EPIRB, this could involve delays in the order of hours.

A VPIRB activates automatically on contact with water, or it can be manually switched on. It will provide alerting ranges in the order of 2 nautical miles from a typical small boat. Larger vessels and shore stations with higher antennas will receive the distress signal over longer ranges.

At present, there is only one VPIRB model available, the Mobilarm V100 VPIRB.
HOW DOES A VPIRB WORK?

The VPIRB can be automatically activated from the 'armed' position when the device is immersed in water. Manual activation is also possible.

The VPIRB transmits an alert, a unique identity number and the MOB's exact GPS coordinates to all vessels in the vicinity, including the distressed mariner's vessel, as well as to any land-based VHF receivers in range.

The VPIRB automatically sends an initial "Mayday - man overboard" alarm in DSC data message format, using VHF DSC (channel 70), to alert the parent vessel and other vessels that the MOB event has occurred.

As soon as a GPS lock is obtained, typically in under 30 seconds, the distress call is transmitted again with latitude and longitude coordinates, using VHF DSC and in a synthesized voice format on VHF marine channel 16. This is repeated at regular intervals to update rescue personnel with the MOB's current position.
Overview of the VPIRB Rescue Anatomy
Overview of the VPIRB Rescue Anatomy
NOT JUST ANOTHER EPIRB

Conventional marine personal locating beacons such as personal EPIRBs must be manually activated to send any signal - as mandated by regulatory authorities. This may be difficult or impossible to do if a MOB is injured or unconscious. Personal EPIRBs transmit an emergency signal to a remote onshore location, which can introduce unnecessary delay in the recovery of an MOB - greatly reducing their chances of survival.

VPIRBs provide instant notification to a mariner's vessel that a MOB event has occurred, alerting the people who are in the best position to rescue the MOB and ensuring they are deployed as soon as possible.

VPIRBs do not require any additional dedicated receiving base stations, 121.5 MHz directional finding equipment or satellite rental time. With a VPIRB, as long as a VHF radio is onboard, no other equipment need be installed; the VPIRB uses only existing industry-standard VHF marine radio networks.

source

Friday, 4 June 2010

GMDSS - A WAY AHEAD

The following is a summary of a presentation made to the 2010 RTCM conference in San Diego, USA.

GMDSS - A WAY AHEAD
What’s wrong with DSC?

 These days, the GMDSS is all about Satcoms, and the drive for more and more bandwidth to ships. No one uses the GMDSS HF gear…it sits in the corner of the bridge, gathering dust….right?
  
Wrong.


A typical GMDSS HF Coast Radio Station receives, on average, 6000 DSC calls per day. 6000 calls, distributed over 2 – 16 MHz….Even using a modest antenna system, you can hear calls on the 12 and 8 MHz DSC channels at least every minute, all day.
 
What’s the problem?
 The system is clearly being used and is working well technically – ships are communicating with coast stations and other ships.   DSC was originally designed to automate radiotelephone calls between ships at sea and telephone subscribers ashore.  However, satellite/cellular communications have replaced HF radio-based telephone systems for merchant ships. The result is that DSC is effectively designed around a function that no longer exists. This is evident in the number of redundant tele-commands incorporated in the DSC standard.
 
Confusion….it need not be so…
One of the great advantages of using a PC for coast station DSC software is that the operator interface can be easily modified or redesigned.  We can change labels, we can alter the layout and we can hide the more baffling DSC tele-commands to make the system operator friendly.   Alas, ships can’t do that...  They are faced with a myriad of menus, containing many superfluous commands, all which are never used. 
The DSC technical specification, ITU Resolution –M.493, has been revised 13 times since it was first published.    Many of the revisions incorporate very important operational and technical updates, which make the system much more efficient and easier to use.  Equipment performance standards are updated as a result of the revisions, and DSC manufacturers dutifully incorporate these updates into their latest products. 
However, where the good ship DSC hits the proverbial iceberg is real-world implementation - the revised performance standards apply only to new equipment

There is no requirement for ships to update their DSC equipment to comply with new specification.
So, as a result, ships are sailing around with 1st   and 2nd generation DSC systems….old and clunky, full of redundant tele-commands, and thus a nightmare to use….

To their credit, the USCG has identified this problem. 

They put a paper to the recent IMO COMSAR meeting proposing that SOLAS Chapter 4 be modified to require the latest DSC software version to be used. This issue is moving forward through IMO, but it will take time to implement…
 
Oversight…
Despite all the DSC traffic, many ships are still making fundamental mistakes with the system. 
Using the latest software will go some way to fixing the problem – but, what is really needed is for some central body to take charge of DSC, and conduct an active monitoring and education campaign.   
 Internet technology allows remote control of DSC shore stations from anywhere in the world. 
 A number of DSC HF monitoring stations could easily be controlled from a central point, to provide world-wide coverage.    It would be a simple matter to match a ship’s DSC identity number (MMSI) to her Inmarsat number.   Ships which regularly breach DSC operational standards could be sent a polite reminder (or even an operational guide) via Inmarsat….. 
 
Don’t let small craft near DSC…!
 Many SAR agencies are reluctant to promote VHF DSC to recreational users because of a fear of false alerts. Any automated distress system will suffer a certain percentage of false alerts, either malicious or inadvertent.  Training, education and equipment design will address the majority of these problems - but there is one solution that would really solve the DSC false alert issueMandate that all DSC equipment is to be fitted with an inbuilt GPS/GNSS receiver.


  • Every distress call will contain a real position.


  • This will all but eliminate malicious false alerts.


  • Inadvertent alerts will be identified and localised.
 GPS receivers are small and cheap – they could be easily integrated into a VHF radio.
  
In summary - Fixing DSC…


  • Remove the remainder of superfluous tele-commands from the standard, to simplify the system as much as possible…DSC isn’t going to be used for setting up phone or fax calls……


  •  Mandate updating of ship equipment to comply with the latest standards.


  •  Become pro-active with monitoring and real time education/mentoring.


  •  Fit an integrated GPS receiver to all new DSC radios.
 
 
UPDATING THE GMDSS
Let’s get rid of DSC….it is all too hard…
There has been ‘corridor discussion’ at IMO of removing MF DSC from Sea Area A2 and possibly A3 – this smacks of the ‘turn it off and ignore it’ philosophy demonstrated by some ships.  Abandoning DSC would be a serious mistake.   The inherent strength of the GMDSS is the multiplicity of communication links it provides over different satellite and terrestrial bearers.   If one system is down, you always have an alternative. 

 MF DSC provides ship-ship and ship-shore alerting in Sea Area A2 and ship-ship alerting in Sea Area A3. 
 What do we replace it with?  Satcom systems can not provide direct ship-ship alerting to all other vessels in the area of the ship in distress. Inmarsat C has demonstrated its worth time and time again for ship-shore alerting – it is one of the GMDSS’ standout sub-systems.  However, it can not replace DSC.
Yes, DSC has problems – but we must fix them, not just give up and say it is all too hard…..
 
NBDP?  Ditch it…
NBDP (aka radio telex) is a clunky old system that (to my knowledge) has never been used in anger for distress traffic.  A3 ships already have an option to dispense with it – this should logically be extended to all A3 ships. I know if the water was coming in the bridge wing door, I would rather be talking into a microphone than trying to type on a keyboard…
 
A truly global system?
Australia is still effectively running 2 distress systems in parallel – GMDSS and pre-GMDSS.  Australia is not alone in this – many developed nations still run old and new marine radio networks.
 Many areas of the world have no GMDSS infrastructure at all…
 Why? The GMDSS has been in place for more than 10 years….
 If we are going to modernise the system, then surely we need to start with making it universal.
 
Way ahead……it isn’t rocket science….
 
·         GMDSS shore infrastructure needs to be installed in the Pacific.
 
·         Marine Radio equipment standards for smaller, non-SOLAS vessels need to be modified to include DSC
 
·         Governments need to amend their marine legislation to require DSC equipment to be fitted to all ships - large and small.
 
·        GMDSS Sea Area A1 needs to be declared in areas of high shipping activity.
 
·       Governments need to develop a transition plan to eventually phase out voice watchkeeping and replace it with automated DSC watches.

Source here

Thursday, 3 June 2010

Ghost Ship.

I love this image of the fishing boat high & dry.
is it abandoned? or is someone coming back for her?

Wednesday, 2 June 2010

GHOST SHIPS



GHOST SHIPS

I have always been fascinated by old ships. The ones laid up in harbour & left to rot. From my time at sea, I know that a ship is just not a lump of metal, she is a living breathing thing & seeing these once proud ships lying there waiting patiently for their fate always makes me linger.

IWO JIMA class Amphibious Assault Ship (USS Tripoli)



Here is a great site by Amy heiden Click here for site She has photographed many of the U.S. Ghost ships & writes very eloquently about what it is like to be onboard one.....

Her Flickr site is fasinating & holds many fantastic images link



The "Mothball" Fleet [also known as the National Defence Reserve Fleet] is a collection of decommissioned military ships (cargo ships, tankers, Victory ships, missile cruisers, barges and tugboats) sitting in Northern California's Suisun Bay. Very few of these ships are reserve ready (thought many of them were years ago). Most have been decaying here for decades and await scrapping.

Not quite ghost ships but near enough. Ships laid up due to the down turn in the Global economy.







I do not know the name of her.

If anyone has any information, please post it here.

USS Gage leaves James River Reserve Fleet

The USS Gage departed the James River Reserve Fleet Thursday, headed to Esco Marine, Inc., in Brownsville, Texas, for recycling. According to the Department of the Navy's Naval Historical Center, the attack transport USS Gage was commissioned in November, 1944. During World War II, the Gage participated in the initial assault on Okinawa in April, 1945, landing men and supplies for five days despite nearly continuous alerts of Japanese suicide attacks. She was decommissioned in Norfolk in February, 1947, and transferred to the Maritime Administration Reserve Fleet in September, 1958. Esco Marine, Inc. was awarded a contract to recycle the Gage on July 3rd.

The Gage is the 81st ship to leave the James River Reserve Fleet since January 1, 2001.

NASA Satellites Keep Watch on Gulf Current Near Spill

NASA satellite altimetry data are being used in combination with data from other satellites to track changes in a huge warm ocean current in the Gulf of Mexico that could transport oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil rig far away from the Gulf. Image credit: NASA/JPL/University of Colorado

Scientists and agencies monitoring the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico are keeping a wary eye on changes in the nearby Loop Current, a warm ocean current that is part of the Gulf Stream. Beginning as a large flow of warm water from the Caribbean, the Loop Current heads up into the eastern part of the Gulf of Mexico and then turns south before finally moving out through the Straits of Florida and northward into the Gulf Stream. Deep and fast moving, the Loop Current often breaks off and forms strong, clockwise rotating eddies called anticyclones that travel westward into the Gulf. The currents along the outer edges of the Loop Current, as well as these eddies, have been clocked at speeds as high as three to four knots (three to five miles per hour), comparable to the fastest ocean currents ever observed.
Because the Loop Current and its eddies are warmer, and thus higher in surface elevation, than the surrounding waters, they are easily spotted by satellite altimeters, such as those aboard the NASA/French Space Agency Jason 1 and Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason 2 satellites. Scientists use the latest satellite measurements of sea-surface height from these and other satellite altimeters to create maps showing the location, direction and speed of currents in the Gulf of Mexico.
This image, created on May 23, 2010, using measurements of sea surface height from multiple satellites, including Jason-1 and OSTM/Jason-2, shows the speed and direction of surface currents in the Gulf. The northern portion of the Loop Current, shown in red, appears about to detach and form a separate eddy--a large, warm, clockwise-spinning vortex of water that is the ocean's version of a cyclone. The star shows the former location of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that exploded and sank in April, and has been leaking oil since. Scientists believe a large eddy between the oil spill and the Loop Current could keep, at least temporarily, some of the spilling oil from reaching the Florida Straits and the Gulf Stream.
This map was produced by the Colorado Center for Astrodynamics Research in Boulder, Colo. The center processes satellite measurements of sea surface height in near real-time to create maps of the Gulf of Mexico, showing the location of medium-sized eddies and fronts. More information on these data products is available at http://argo.colorado.edu/~realtime/welcome/.

 Source here

Thursday, 27 May 2010

Fisherman of the Year 2010 Semi Final Images.

The Fisherman of the Year 2010 ran by Crew 2 Crew with the Fishermens Mission was held on Friday at the Glasgow SECC. It was a new competition designed by Graham Duncan , CEO of Crew 2 Crew Ltd. The prizes on offer were worth over £4000, so there was a lot to play for! The Semis were held on the main stage of fishing Expo 2010, in front of a suprisingly large crowd. This crowd really got behind the competitors & the noise levels grew, with each competitors supporters trying to out cheer each other.



It was a close run competition.


Comprising of Net mending, rope splicing, donning a lifejacket & answering Maritime related questions.



There were 3 competitors for the Semis. All 3 of them really put in a great effort. There was some amazing net mending & the speed of David Stevens splicing was amazing!




Fisherman of the Year 2010 Pictures of the Heats

Fisherman of the Year 2010 During the first two days days of the Fishing Expo 2010 at the Glasgow SECC, Crew 2 Crew held heats for the Fisherman of the year 2010. Below are some of the pictures of the heats taken over the two days. The competitors had to Splice a rope, tie 3 knots, secure a line correctly to a Liferaft & then answer 3 questions correctly. the times would then be noted on the website.

The Fisherman of the Year Stand



A competitor Splicing









David E Stevens was the runner up at the Fisherman of the Year Competition 2010

David E Stevens was the runner up at the Fisherman of the Year Competition 2010. David did amazingly well. In the Semi Finals on Friday he only lost by under 1 second. He was by far the fastest splicer in the competition both in the Semis & in the Final. On finding out that the finals were to be at 1230 on the Saturday his was prepared to attend & risk missing his flight from Glasgow Airport at 1430! It was a close call, with David having to leave the SECC as soon as the competition had finished.

On the day of the final, he was very gracious & supplied Crew 2 Crew with invaluable information on Cornish Fishing. In the final he lost the practical part of the competition by an even smaller margin than the Semi…it was a photo finish with only thousandths of a second in it.



He unfortunately lost on the head to head question & answer section. He was magnanimous in defeat & even though he had to rush to get his flight, he took the time to congratulate John Buchan the Winner.

The first image here has David mending the nets. the second image is of David putting on the lifejacket. At this point of the compeition, there was absolutely nothing between David & John. Indeed it was probably the closest finish to any competition I had ever seen. At this point the crowd were really getting behind all the competitors.



He was a worthy finalist & a credit not only to Cornish Fishermen but to all Fishermen in general.



Please find a link to Davids website Here

Tuesday, 18 May 2010

Fishing Expo 2010 at the Glasgow SECC

 Crew 2 Crew are at the Glasgow SECC for Fishing Expo 2010 & will be doing live webcam streaming & putting up images as soon as they are ready.

Some images from Fisherman of the Year competition 2010 at the Glasgow SECC. Crew 2 Crew started setting up for Fishing Expo 2010 at the Glasgow SECC today, Tuesday 18th May. There was alot of work to do, as you can see by the images. This topic will be updated as soon as we get new images in from the Show. Crew 2 Crew will be hosting live streaming shows of all the heats, Semi finals & final live from the SECC.

We will be doing live streams via ustream during the event, so stay posted for the exact times.

Crew 2 Crew will be on Stand D24.

Fisherman of the Year 2010









Monday, 17 May 2010

Leaving the Sea for the last time.


There comes a time in a Seaman’s life when it is time to hang up those sea boots, put away the foul weather gear & contemplate a life away from the seas & Oceans which we all love.
There are a hundred & one things that need to be done to ensure that this transition is as smooth as possible.  Some people have been at sea since leaving school & the Ocean has been their office ever since.

This transition can be a very stressful time for the entire family, if not handled correctly.
The main areas of stress in any relationship seem to be communication, money and children, when families are separated for lengthy periods of time, the stress of the situation continues to build, and sometimes, there isn’t a resolution until after the family is reunited.  This is what you could be returning to.  Don't expect a "Change of Command" at the door. Transitions take time and patience.

There is also the strange situation of getting to know your loved ones again.  Remember, they will have been used to running the household without you.  Now you will want to take control of the house finances & making this transition into partnership of responsibility is a tricky one & fraught with danger.  You cannot just return home say you are here for good & just take over, it doesn’t work like that.  Your partner has been running your home perfectly without you (if this had not been the case, you would not have been at sea for so long).  So why should he or she give up that responsibility just because you are back.   There has to be a lot of communication at this stage.

Below are the “Ten Commandments Written for U.S. Sailors return home from a deployment but I feel the same issue stand for the time you return home for good.
This is an adaptation of material written by CDR Bryan J. Weaver, CHC, USN, Chaplain 24th MEU (sac) and LCDR Richard Saul, Command Chaplain, USS KEARSARGE (LHD 3).
I. Thou shalt expect your homecoming to be stressful. Stress is any reaction to change. Even positive changes can produce stress in personal relationships. Spouses are already preparing for our return. Aside from official homecoming activities, your spouse is probably trying quickly to look her /his best, find an arrival outfit, experiment with new hairstyles, plan special menus, and prepare the children for Dad/Mum's return to the home. On board, our excitement level goes up as our homecoming date draws closer and with each passing day, we have to fight the "laissez faire" attitude that creeps into our lives. Both of us are idealizing our return and reunion. Out of our hardships and separation come our dreams. On one hand, we dream about our houses, home-cooked meals, hobbies, driving our cars or trucks, spending time with our children, and intimacy. On the other hand, our spouses may be dreaming of help around the house, time away from the kids, support, encouragement and spending quality time together. Even though we both have experienced separation, the nature of our hardships may be different. Recognize that either marriage partner may not immediately meet expectations.
II. Thou shalt enjoy being an invited guest in your own home. As difficult as it may be sound, our spouses and children have managed without their Sailor. Our spouses may have become more independent running the household as a single parent. In some cases, Sailors feel threatened by their spouse's newfound autonomy and they feel unwanted in their own home upon their return from sea duty. Please try to remember that personal growth has probably taken place and things are not the same. When you first return, allow the family to continue functioning as they have for the last 6 months. Experience their agenda for your reunion. Remember, they have been planning for your homecoming for a long time.
III. Thou shalt not criticize your spouse upon your return. Chances are that your spouse has done the very best job possible given the circumstances. Considering the fast-paced schedule of a deployed squadron, she/he's going to have to continue using those coping skills. Provide encouragement, praise, and thanks. Don't be a Scrooge in showing your appreciation for what your spouse has done in your   absence. A judgmental, critical, "know it all" attitude will come across as though you do not appreciate what has been accomplished during your absence. Your spouse is the glue that has held the family together .
IV. Thou shalt change. Change in life is inevitable. It is a fact of life; deployments force us out of our "comfort zones". The way things used to be often makes us comfortable because we always knew what to expect. Although it takes energy to adjust to change, the result can be positive. Where a marriage has little personal and mutual growth, it has a tendency to wither on the vine. When you see changes, remember Commandments I through III.
V. Thou shalt spend quality time with your children. Children equate love with time spent with them. Period. Arguments about meeting your own needs and wanting to see your old friends do not carry weight with your children who have not seen you for six months. Spend time with your children as a group and with each one on an individual basis. Each child has a need to be loved and feel special. Children have a tendency to idolize their parents. You are a hero at home. During times of change, children's behavior may become unruly. Allow your spouse to continue to be the primary disciplinarian in the home. Support your spouse's efforts and gradually take over this important role as a parent. Tell your children that you love them and back it up with your affection and time.
VI. Thou shalt not treat your spouse like a one-night stand. Both you and your spouse have been looking forward to your reunion for a long time. Treat your spouse with honest, care, and respect. Sexual intimacy is a wonderful blessing in a marriage; treat your spouse with lots of tenderness, compassion, and helpfulness. Kindness and respect go a long way toward kindling the spark of romance.
VII. Thou shalt compromise your social activities for the first few weeks. Your spouse may have met new friends who provided support during the deployment and naturally wants you to meet them. You may want to do the same. Resist the urge to pack the first couple of weeks after a reunion with a full social calendar that leaves both of you exhausted. Spend time with each other and your children.
VIII. Thou shalt watch your finances. The best liberty port is where your family resides, making it tempting to go out and celebrate with spending sprees. Expensive restaurants, a new wardrobe, and new toys for the children subtract quickly from available funds. Plan ahead how much you can afford to spend. Avoid overspending. Watch your credit limits closely. Remember, "today's buying is tomorrow's crying."
IX. Thou shalt confess to a chaplain and not to a spouse. While honesty is always the best policy, timing and discretion are essential. While you may feel the urge to dump on your spouse all that happened during the deployment, it rarely helps a marriage. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. If something is weighing heavy on your heart or mind, see a chaplain, civilian clergy, or a counselor .  
X. Thou shalt give your time, talents, and treasures to your family. Often during deployments, many households have separate accounts to manage the finances during the long months of separation. You may have become accustomed to separate accounts and budgets and it may take some time for family finances to flow smoothly. Accordingly, make a conscientious effort to integrate available funds toward the needs of the household. Your greatest asset is yourself; so don't forget to share your time with your loved ones. It will pay huge dividends for a long time.



coming ashore may be easy but nailing that perfect job is tough.  Here are ten things you should shy away from when interviewing for that new position.

  1. Don’t be negative about a previous employer: If you go into a company and trash a previous employer for any reason the first thought through the hiring manager’s mind is ‘how long it will take for this person to start bad mouthing our company’.  Secondly if you trash someone specific, there is a chance the hiring manager knows that person or knows someone who knows that person, and you don’t want to burn any bridges… Bottom line; don’t do it.
  2. Don’t bring money up as a candidate: Ok, money is definitely a motivator, but if it is the key motivator, no one will want to work with you.  It is all about perception; if your greed is perceived in an interview your stock will drop dramatically.
  3. Don’t fail the drug test: Don’t do drugs.
  4. Don’t tell the interviewer you are smarter than they are: You are at an interview to sell how you will add value to the company, not how you will take the hiring managers job.

Friday, 14 May 2010

Somali pirates free UK-flagged tanker after ransom paid

Somali pirates free UK-flagged tanker after ransom paid. The St James Park was seized in the Gulf of Aden Somali pirates have released a British-flagged ship with 26 crew on board after a ransom was paid, the EU anti-piracy mission (Eunavfor) says. Its statement says the ransom was dropped to the pirates holding the St James Park chemical tanker at Somalia's port of Garacaad on Thursday. The statement did not say how much money was paid. The vessel was on its way from Spain to Thailand when it was seized on 28 December in the Gulf of Aden.

"On the morning of May 13 a ransom drop was made to the pirate group holding the St James Park at anchorage at Garacaad," Eunavfor said. It said the ship "is now safely under way and Eunavfor is continuing to monitor the situation", without providing any further details. The 13,924-tonne ship's 26 crew hail from Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, Poland, Georgia, India, Turkey and the Philippines. It was carrying a cargo of chemicals used to make plastics when it was seized.

Pirate attacks have been common off the Somali coast and international navies have been deployed to counter them. Correspondents say the upsurge in piracy in the region is a consequence of the failure to find a solution to Somalia's continuing political disarray.

More here

Wednesday, 12 May 2010

Fisherman of the Year Competition 2010 - The Tasks


The competition will be split into two task types:
1.       Qualification heats, and
2.        Semi finals each day and the Final on the last day
Qualification heats
These will be conducted as a circuit, with one task following another, in a simple six step heat against the clock.
 Tasks
1.       Needle filling
Correctly fill a net needle with two fathoms of twine.
2.       Eye splice with 4 tucks and a taper
Splice an eye into three strand medium rope with the standard four tucks and a taper where the three ends are in a line.
3.       Completion of 3 knots
Simply tie three well known knows correctly as quickly as possible
4.       Hydrostatic release test
Attach a liferaft painter correctly to a hydrostatic release device on a cradle so that it correctly releases in an emergency (better take a quick look at your own liferaft)
5.       3 Questions
Answer three questions correctly about, navigation, lights, seamanship, safety, or Commercial Fishing
6.       Donning of survival suit and life jacket
Get into a survival suit and don a Duncan lifejacket (not as easy as it sounds against the clock)
The fastest five competitors of the day will go through to the semi-final event on that day and the winners of the semi-finals will go through to the final held on the last day the Saturday.
Semi-Finals and Finals
Tasks
1.       Needle filling                                                    Approx 30 seconds
Correctly fill a net needle with two fathoms of twine.
2.       Net mending                                                     Approx 3 minutes
Mend a V shaped hole in a 4inch mesh net
3.       Cable splicing                                                    Approx 5 minutes
Liverpool splice a length of prepared combination wire
4.       Identification questions                               Approx 1 minute
Answer a tough fishing trivia question, but you get another one with each wrong answer
5.       Immersion suit and life jacket  donning                Approx  3 minutes
Get into an immersion suit and don a Duncan lifejacket then ring the bell!
6.       1st and 2nd place to go on a head to head in a 5 question weakest link finale

Monday, 10 May 2010

Fisherman of the Year 2010

My company Crew 2 Crew Ltd with The Fishermens Mission has created the Fisherman of the Year Competition, to be run over 3 days  The competition aims to test the skills and knowledge required to be successful in the commercial fishing industry. Every contestant will attempt to prove him or herself as the most versatile and qualified crewman to be crowned the Fisherman Of The Year 2010.

The prizes include a cash prize from Crew 2 Crew, Oilskins, survival suits and Auto-Pilot systems, all kindly donated by our sponsors. Total prize value worth over £5 000! Don’t miss this opportunity to compete with the best in the industry and get a chance to win fantastic prizes.


The Prizes

First prize includes an expenses paid trip to compete in the fisherman of the Year in the Faeroes Isles worth £1500 Further prizes include oilskins, survival suits and equipment such as Auto-Pilot systems donated by our sponsors.

The Event

A series of trials testing skills critical in the industry such as net mending, rope splicing, survival and safety tests, navigational knowledge and more.

Cant Make it?

Keep up with all the latest from the competition and the Crew 2 Crew stand at the event with our live webcam stream. You can check out our competition leader board, showing you the latest results from the competition.


Dont Miss out, Make sure you have a place at what is undoubtedly going to be the most exciting competition for Fisherman this year. The winner will go to the Faroe Islands to compete for more prizes! Register now by clicking below.
 Register here


Fishing Expo 2010, 20-22 May 2010, Glasgow SECC

Thursday, 6 May 2010

Extreme Weirdness: Antarctica’s “Blood Falls”




There is a glacier in Antarctica that seems to be weeping a river of blood. It’s one of the continent’s strangest features, and it’s located in one of the continent’s strangest places — the McMurdo Dry Valleys, a huge, ice-free zone and one of the world’s harshest deserts. So imagine you’re hiking through this –


– which has been kept ice-less since God was a child because of something called the katabatic winds, which sweep over the valleys at up to 200 mph and suck all the moisture out of them. Anyway, you’re hiking along, passing dessicated penguin carcasses and such, and you come to this.


A bleeding glacier. Discovered in 1911 by a member of Robert Scott’s ill-fated expedition team, its rusty color was at first theorized to be caused by some sort of algae growth. Later, however, it was proven to be due to iron oxidation. Every so often, the glacier spews forth a clear, iron-rich liquid that quickly oxidizes and turns a deep shade of red. According to Discover Magazine –
The source of that water is an intensely salty lake trapped beneath 1,300 feet of ice, and a new study has now found that microbes have carved out a niche for themselves in that inhospitable environment, living on sulfur and iron compounds. The bacteria colony has been isolated there for about 1.5 million years, researchers say, ever since the glacier rolled over the lake and created a cold, dark, oxygen-poor ecosystem.

Politicans and Shipping: Are they oil and water?

This heading captured my eye.....are Politicans turing a blind eye to the UK shipping industry? I found this great debate which is happening in October.

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LSLC - Maritime Business Forum announces the 11th Cadwallader Event in which a debate will take place...

To be held on 6 October 2010 (5pm for 5:45pm) at Lloyds of London with Lord Clarke of Stone-cum-Ebony in the chair.

LSLC and leading industry luminaries call upon all sectors of the shipping industry, including lawyers, the media, politicians and regulators to come together and debate the importance of interaction between the maritime sectors and politicians.

"THIS HOUSE believes that lack of communication between the relevant government departments and the shipping industry inhibits a clear understanding of how the industry works."

Furthermore

"THIS HOUSE believes that lack of interest in the industry's concerns by senior politicians undervalues the contribution of maritime services to national and international economies and to the public at large."

The debate aims to conclude with recommendations about what steps could be taken by both sides to build a constructive dialogue between politicians and the industry for the common benefit.

Should you wish to be part of this important debate, please contact the LSLC office

Sponsorship: There are sponsorship opportunities for this event - should you wish to sponsor the event, please contact the Chairman of the Centre

Main website here.

Fleet decline & the volcano


The Icelandic Volcano these past 2 months has really given the Maritime Community an opportunity to highlight their cause.
Unfortunately, I really have not seen anyone from the Maritime Industry pushing the fact that freight is still being moved around the world with no issues what-so-ever.  All the news stories highlight how “travel around Europe etc” as been paralyzed.

Nautilus UK has said that the European Transport Crisis caused by the volcanic ash (as we speak today on the 5th of May airspace in Scotland has been shutdown again) has highlighted the need for a sizable UK Merchant Navy Fleet, with British Crew….But who is championing this issue?  Nautilus quotes “This crisis demonstrates the fragility of the just-in-time transport chains and underlined the UK’s dependence upon shipping for food, petrol & other supplies that we usually take for granted.

The UK is a seafaring nation & needs to ensure that there is an adequate number of British Ships & Seafarers to respond to national emergencies.

Nautilus UK & the TUC did table an emergency motion, here is the text.

The text of the emergency motion tabled by Nautilus at the Scottish TUC reads:

This conference notes with concern the disruption and inconvenience caused to supply chains, passengers, and the economy by the suspension of flights in northern Europe as a result of the Icelandic volcanic eruption. Conference believes that this event underlines the importance of our transport infrastructure and the need to maintain investment and resources in all modes to ensure integrated systems.

Conference also notes that the government is considering requisitioning merchant ships to repatriate Britons stranded overseas. However, conference notes with alarm that since the last time UK merchant ships were requisitioned by the government (during the Falklands War) the UK fleet has declined in ship numbers from almost 1,000 to fewer than 300 and the number of UK seafarers serving in the UK shipping industry has been cut from almost 55,000 to barely 20,000.

Conference therefore records its doubts about the availability of adequate numbers of British ships at a time of national emergency and the danger of relying upon the open market and foreign vessels at a time of crisis.

Conference also condemns the threats by UK shipowners to leave the red ensign as a result of progressive regulation to end pay discrimination between seafarers of different nationalities on British ships, noting that any further exodus from the UK flag would increase the nation’s dependence upon foreign-registered vessels.

Conference notes the UK’s continued strong reliance upon shipping for its economic and strategic wellbeing and therefore calls upon the government to take proactive measures to further protect the British shipping industry and to stimulate increased recruitment and training of British seafarers.


It is just these types of unforeseen emergencies which prove the UK must keep a viable Merchant Fleet.

Wednesday, 5 May 2010

Fisherman of the Year competition launched


An exciting new ‘Fisherman of the Year’ competition will be staged at this year’s Fishing 2010 exhibition in Glasgow with prizes worth at least £5,000 on offer in a three-day event to seek out the UK’s most experienced and proficient fisherman.
 
The tough competition aims to find the UK’s top commercial fisherman through a series of challenges against the clock that will test their skills and practical knowledge.  As well as a substantial cash prize of £1,000 along with fishing equipment and clothing, the winner will also be awarded with an all expenses paid trip to the Faroe Islands in August to participate in the world net-mending championships.
Organised by Inverurie based global crew information services provider, Crew2crew.com, in association with the Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen, the ‘Fisherman of the Year’ competition will be one of the major highlights of Fishing 2010, with as many fishermen as possible being encouraged to register their interest in participating through the specially created competition website, www.foty2010.com
The format will involve heats on each morning of the exhibition, with semi finals on the Thursday and Friday afternoons and the final on the Saturday afternoon (22 May). During the heats fishermen will face a variety of trials against the clock, including net mending and splicing skills, a hydrostatic liferaft release competition, a knowledge test, and a speed trial for donning an immersion suit and lifejacket.

The top five fishermen from each heat will then go forward to the semi-finals that will involve a similar series of gruelling tests, with the first and second placed contestants winning a place in Saturday’s final. The winner and the runners ups will be in line to win a number of prizes – including clothing and safety equipment - with an equivalent cash value of at least £5,000, although this figure could rise to as much as £6,000 as more sponsors come on board.

Graham Duncan managing director of Crew 2 Crew, said: “We are delighted to have been able to organise this competition in association with the Fishermen’s Mission. This will be a real test of skill and knowledge under the pressure of the clock and the winner really will be deserving of the title of ‘Fisherman of the Year 2010’.

“We wanted to organise something a little bit different for the exhibition that would prove a magnet for fishermen to attend. We envisage that the competition will create friendly rivalry between fishermen from different areas of the UK and the various fishing sectors.”

Sharon Kane of the Fishermen’s Mission said: “We are delighted to be associated with this competition. There are a whole range of difficult skills and knowledge that a commercial fisherman needs to acquire and this competition will provide a superb showcase of the unique talent within the fishing industry.”
Fran McIntyre, managing director of QD Events, the organiser of Fishing 2010, said: “We believe there will be a huge amount of interest in this competition and we encourage fishermen to register their interest in participating as early as possible.”

Fishing 2010 will be held at the SECC in Glasgow from 20-22 May. More information at www.fishingexpo.co.uk