From the monthly archives:

July 2008

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Flotsam or Jetsam? Wrong either way.

by Douglas Gould on July 30, 2008

Found this yesterday while on route to a job. I stopped, took a quick photo, pulled them in with my boat hook, dispatched the ballons with a sharp knife, and tossed the carcasses in my trash bag.

This kind of crap is deadly to a sea turtle, who can mistake a ballon for a jellyfish, which are part of the turtle’s normal diet. Floating debris is hazardous to many seabirds and other aquatic life.

Over the years, I’ve passed lots of ballons out there. For the most part, I have just driven by, thinking myself too busy to stop and pick them up. From now on, I will make an effort to remove ballons from the ocean whenever I can.

For more information on the floating trash problem, see
http://marinedebris.noaa.gov/
http://www.epa.gov/OWOW/oceans/debris/
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/04/070423-ocean-plastic.html

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iPhone becomes part of my cockpit

by Douglas Gould on July 24, 2008

Those who know him (most of my readers) know that the owner of Safe/Sea likes to stay cutting edge. If there is a new computer out, he’s gotta have one. So of course, all the Safe/Sea captains and full-time staff just had to have iPhones. I mean, all you could do on those old Nextel phones was talk to someone. How pedestrian!

I’m a big fan of technology if it actually improves something, or makes my job easier. Buying the latest gadget just because it’s new or cool is a waste of money, IMO.

The iPhone has a number of very useful applications for towers, and today I was very glad to have it along as this very nasty thunderstorm passed over Block Island.

Note: this photo was taken with the iPhone. While the built in camera has practically no options (no zoom, no flash), it takes beautiful pictures.

Ok, the camera is fine, but as the storm approached, I was able to bring up Wunderground’s iPhone weather page on the phone’s web browser, and watch the Nexrad radar image to see exactly where the storm was. Here is an image I took (with another camera) of the iPhone’s screen. The little shape in the middle is Block Island, with a big red cell approaching from the south. Turning on “animated radar” shows the movement of the storm, and the images are only a few minutes old. (click on photo to see larger image)

Sure, you can get weather radar overlapped on your GPS plotter with an XM radio subscription, but can you carry that in your pocket? Or, you can see rain on your ship’s radar; I was able to monitor this storm while standing in line for coffee and walking around the docks. I watched this front approach for over an hour, and I knew when it would get here and how big it was. I was able to anticipate the wind direction based on the storm’s movement, and once it started pouring rain on the pond, I could see how long the storm would last.

That kind of information is more than just a gimmick. The iPhone allowed me to stay informed about an approaching weather system without being tied to a desk or TV or radio.

A few nights ago, I neighboring tower called me at 2300 and warned me about a large thunderstorm that had just passed over his harbor and was heading my direction. With my head still on my pillow, I pulled up the radar on the iPhone, and I could see that the storm would pass north of me. I turned out the light and went back to sleep.

More about the iPhone next week.

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TowboatUS Sebastian/Melbourne Lands more derelict disposal work

After some very lucrative work last year [read my post here], Absolute Towing & Salvage of Melbourne, FLA has received another nice derelict disposal contract: Derelict boats to be removed from Indian River : Indian River County : TCPalm Job: Remove seven derelict boats left since 2004 hurricanes from the Indian River Lagoon in Indian [...]

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July 21, 2008 Read the full article →

Boat/US Press Release on Salvage

Well, those who have known me for a while know that I’ve bitched and moaned about the way salvage is portrayed in the press, and in particular I’ve singled out some Boat/US literature as guilty of too much hyperbole with phrases like “be warned”, or “avoid salvage” and “avoid the high fees”. It was always [...]

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July 18, 2008 Read the full article →

No Time for Losers

A guy buys himself a Rolex watch 40 years ago. He’s fanatically careful with it, and even though its a dive watch good to about 180′, he never wears it swimming, for fear of losing it. 3 days ago, he gently placed it on a cockpit cushion while he and his wife went for a [...]

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July 10, 2008 Read the full article →

Results are IN!

Well, the first annual Red Right Returning July 4th service survey is now complete. An exhaustively unscientific study of the results has been carelessly compiled by Rusty Shackle, VP of our market research division, who may have spilled some beer on the data before he had a chance to enter it all…. So, the overall [...]

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July 8, 2008 Read the full article →