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There is plenty of fog like that, especially in the summer out
here. Sometimes it can get so thick that I can barely see the bow of my Cal 20. And, the fog is moving at 20 kts or more. "Peter Wiley" wrote in message ... On Tue, 29 Jul 2003 19:07:16 -0400, "Simple Simon" wrote: "Shen44" wrote in message ... Seems this one went belly-up .... thanks AOL. OK Neal, here's a scenario with some questions .... You're proceeding in the Mother of all Pea-soup fogs (can't see your bow), sounding one prolong followed by two short blast and hear a fog signal, someplace forward of your beam (can't exactly tell where, because sound in fog can be distorted) of one prolong followed by two short. What is it? Where is it? What's it doing?What must you do? Are we on collision course? How do you know the answers to any of these questions? I can tell it is NOT a motor boat. I can tell is either a sailboat, a NUC, a RAM, or one of the other vessels that sounds a one prolong/two short blast signal. Where is it? It is somewhere on a line between me and the sound signal it produces. What's it doing? Can't be told because it can be doing any number of things. What must I do? I must determine if a risk of collision exists before I do anything else. If I determine a risk of collision exists then I must act to avoid a collision which might mean I can make a course change or it might mean holding to my present course and speed of three or four knots until further information becomes available. Are we on a collision course. We might be but that will take some time to determine. If the signal stays on the same bearing and appears to be getting louder then we are on a collision course How do I know the answer to these questions? The answers are known when sufficient information becomes available to answer them and not before. As for a pea soup fog so think that I cannot see to my bow which is all of twenty feet away when I'm at the tiller, there exists no fog so thick. It is a myth. It is perhaps correct to say a fog is so thick that a ship that has the bow hundreds of feet or hundreds of yards from the helm may not be able to see to the bow but don't attempt to say the same thing about a small vessel such as mine. You are completely, absolutely and utterly wrong about fog density. The fact that you make such a claim demonstrates how little real experience you have had at sea. I have personally been in fog thick enough to reduce visibility to less than 5 metres. Peter Wiley |