Many a skipper has blithely motored or sailed away from his mooring, with wife and kids in tow, or some of his “Gilligan’s navy mates”, none of whom would have the slightest idea what to do – to save themselves or the skipper – if something dire happened. This column is about that.
M’aidez!
No one is 100% sure where the term mayday, the universal maritime call for help, comes from albeit the most common inference is the French term for “help me!” “S.O.S.”, the old Morse code equivalent, is said to come from “Save Our Souls.” In truth, the derivation is less important than knowing how to properly call for help. When I train new mariners on radio use, I ask them to take a walkie-talkie, go in the next room and, imaging that there is a dire emergency aboard their vessel, call me for help. This is after I tell that the basic level of information is:
- Who you are
- The nature of your distress
- Where you are and what the boat looks like
- And how many people are aboard (so when the USCG arrives, they don’t leave anybody behind.)
The results are so poor that it results in laughter after about 3 or 4 tries. And this is without the pressure of a real emergency. Eventually, because this is no laughing matter, we get it right.
Do you call for help immediately? Well, assuming that the skipper hasn’t just keeled over with a heart attack, calling for help immediately is probably a good idea. Heart attacks have to be addressed immediately of course – but nothing stops you from yelling, between chest compressions, “somebody get on that radio and call the US Coast Guard – STAT!” So, practice calling for help. Before you need it.
Fire in the Hold!
A skipper can be incapacitated by having to address another emergency – like a fire. Skipper, does your crew know enough about your boat to get her to “a slow bell” (just enough underway progress to control the boat but not so much as to create a windstorm?) Can they steer her so that the fire is now downwind of the rest of the boat (it is hard for a fire to make progress ‘upwind’)? Do they know where the life jackets are if you have abandon ship? So, give them some time at the wheel. Before they need it.
Maaaan Overboard!
A skipper can fall overboard as easy as the next guy, given a single second of inattention. Getting a power boat around to affect a pick up isn’t the most difficult task – as long as they don’t forget to put the engine in neutral once you are alongside. You don’t want them turning you into fish food with the prop. Turning a sailboat about and bearing down on a head bobbing up is a skill that requires a lot of training. But, in both cases, do they know to throw you a life-jacket or a cushion – anything you can use to stay afloat – while never taking their eyes off you? And, calling the USCG right away?
File Photo |
Skipper, the life you save may be your own. Train, train, train. Before you need to…
BTW, if you are interested in being part of USCG Forces, email me at JoinUSCGAux@aol.com or go directly to the US Coast Guard Auxiliary “Flotilla Finder” at http://www.cgaux.org/units.php and we will help you “get in this thing . . .”