From the monthly archives:

August 2008

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Bad Doug!

by Douglas Gould on August 31, 2008

Yeah, everyone who wrote and mentioned that I wasn’t wearing my PFD while working off the North Reef at night is absolutely correct in pointing out my very poor behaviour and bad example. I should have had one of these on, which was hanging in my wheelhouse. I urge everyone to wear one, and I am guilty of not wearing it every single time….and I really should have had it on during that night on the nasty north reef. My bad.

I will strive to wear it from now on, promise!

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North Reef at Night

by Douglas Gould on August 30, 2008

A few loyal readers have commented that they would like to see more video of my work out here at Block Island. Much of the footage I have isn’t very dramatic, and frankly would bore most of the subscribers to RedRightReturning. But, they don’t call me Captain Hollywood for nothing. I did find some video of a job I had last month. Before you watch this clip, let me set the stage so you’ll understand what you are seeing.

The north end of Block Island tapers to a point, understandably named Sandy Point, and extending quite far out from there is the Block Island North Reef, which might have been more correctly name the Block Island Deadly, Narrow and Particularly Nasty Long Sand Bar. I guess North Reef fits better on the charts.

This sandbar is very narrow, and the west side is really almost an underwater cliff: it drops from ankle deep to twelve feet in less than a boat length. The east side is more like a traditional beach, with the depths gradually decreasing from ten feet deep about 200 yards to the east to the ankle deep bar itself. (This geography makes for some very strange seas, and even on this very calm night, you will notice some small breakers that look like they are coming towards my vessel, as if I was on the beach, when actually I’m in deeper water to the west the strand.) That long bar on the chart never really drys even at low tide. It lurks down there below the surface, waiting for the unwary boater or lazy navigator.

About 2100hrs one night, a sailboat calls Mayday and reports himself aground at the north end of Block Island. There was a bunch of thunderstorms rolling down Long Island Sound, but otherwise it was calm and clear. I was underway lickity-split, while the USCG directed all their rescue efforts to playing 20 questions with the mariner on the radio (they never did launch any physical assets to the area that I know of).

From the time I got underway to the time I arrived on scene was probably less than 10 minutes. When I had visual contact, I asked the boater if he had gone aground coming from the east or the west – the answer would make a difference to my approach and which direction I might pull him off. He thought he had come from the west, and as you will see, he was wrong. A boater who has run into an island at night is generally not your best source of reliable navigational information – but you gotta start somewhere…(look again at the chart, he was between the 9′ and the 4′ depths that straddle the reef just north of Sandy Point)

The video begins as I approach from the west (deeper and steeper side) of the reef, and I spin around in preparation to toss him a bridle. As you watch the video, you can actually see the reef just under my swim platform. In the backgound, the Block Island North Light blinks mockingly just behind the grounded boat.

I heard a few shells and stones rattling around in the jet, which is the boat’s way of telling me it’s time for Plan B. Fortunately, with the jet boat, running over hard shell and sand isn’t the end of the world; it doesn’t even really slow the job down.

I quickly zipped around to the other side of the reef. This eastern approach presents a few problems of its own. The depths on that side are very shallow, and when the current is running, it will set you towards the reef. As you can see, conditions were calm on this night, and I had no trouble backing up to his stern and practically handing him my bridle. The look on the faces of his family huddled in the cockpit tells a story about their experience.

As you will see, everything turns out fine, and we even beat those thunderstorms back to the harbor.

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Underwater Clean Up

The Dockmaster and I decided that it was time for someone to pick up all the trash under the docks at the Block Island Boat Basin, where we tie up the Safe/Sea Block Island all summer. We filled two wheelbarrows with junk that we harvested from under just “A” dock, one of the four main [...]

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August 28, 2008 Read the full article →

When Good Jobs Go Bad, Part 2

File Part 2 of this story under “I’d rather be lucky than good any day.” Here is a single frame of my video of the 3 boat raft-up adventure, just as I attempt to implement Modified Plan A. If you remember, this was the plan that sucked wind, and the guy’s chain was just reeling [...]

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August 20, 2008 Read the full article →

More Water Spouts in New England

Safe/Sea’s own Captain Andy Casey spied this water spout chasing him down Narragansett Bay last week. I’m jealous because I’ve always wanted to see one. Click on the picture to see a larger version. This was taken with his iPhone.

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August 17, 2008 Read the full article →

When Good Jobs Go Bad, Part 1

File this story under: “Some days you’re the windshield, some days you’re the bug.” It all began quite routinely, as a thunderstorm approached Block Island on Wednesday. As this cloud passed, it started to rain, and the wind shifted from E @ 6 to W @ 15. The weather caused a three boat raft-up of [...]

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August 17, 2008 Read the full article →