Igloo - Discussion Forum Devon
07 January 2009, 19:59:53 *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
Currently there are 0 Users in FlashChat
 
  Home Blog Help Arcade Arcade Search Calendar Links Gallery Weather Login Register  
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Choppy~!  (Read 686 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Debbie
Catalyst
Administrator
Celebrity
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Female
Posts: 1,701

Thank You
-Given: 139
-Receive: 19



« on: 17 April 2008, 18:19:13 »

Wow look at the sea!

http://www.torquaywebcam.com/livermeadcliff.html

massive waves aparantly closing the sea front road earlier
Logged


Sunlight streams through the window pane
unto a spot on the floor...
then I remember,
it's where you used to lie,
but now you are no more.
PaigntonPearl
Wisest Iglooer 2005
SOMEBODY STOP ME !!!
***********
Offline Offline

Gender: Female
England England

Posts: 14,417

Thank You
-Given: 32
-Receive: 33


An English Rose


« Reply #1 on: 17 April 2008, 19:03:25 »

OMG!  That really looks rough (probably just the way Rad likes it, lol).  I'm not surprised they had to close the sea front.  Bet it was smashing across the road into the park!  And 9C--a bit chilly to be getting drenched!
Logged

raddison
Igloo Addict
*********
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
United Kingdom United Kingdom

Posts: 5,137

Thank You
-Given: 7
-Receive: 22


« Reply #2 on: 17 April 2008, 20:55:22 »

OMG!  That really looks rough (probably just the way Rad likes it, lol).  I'm not surprised they had to close the sea front.  Bet it was smashing across the road into the park!  And 9C--a bit chilly to be getting drenched!

Sorry to disappoint you there PP but I don't like rough seas

Yes I am a sailor and I am a live coward rather than a dead hero so to speak. I know of not one sailor that has his full set of marbles that enjoys bad weather, other than the eccuse to get down the pub.

I totally support the rescue services RNLI (which is maned by VOLUNTEERS?) Marine & Coastguard Agency (gov run)
and while I will watch the wonders of the sea doing what it can to show us how much it can destroy with such ease, I have never understood that term, when within a few seconds a ship can be 'lost' with all lives taken, destroying the family's of the sailors.
Please do not take this as a retort towards you it is how I feel, it is my way of earning a living I have seen many sailors lives ended and listened to the very phrase

Logged

I may not be perfect, but being this close to it is spooky
PaigntonPearl
Wisest Iglooer 2005
SOMEBODY STOP ME !!!
***********
Offline Offline

Gender: Female
England England

Posts: 14,417

Thank You
-Given: 32
-Receive: 33


An English Rose


« Reply #3 on: 18 April 2008, 05:21:33 »

I wonder what one could say instead of "lost".  It certainly seems inappropriate since everyone knows where the ship is, more or less.  Perhaps it has something to do with the loss felt by all those left behind.

And I was really just ribbing you.  I'm sure you'd have to be a bit crazy to enjoy a storm at sea when you're in the middle of it.
Logged

Gerry
IGLOO MEGGA-STAR
**********
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Australia Australia

Posts: 7,538

Thank You
-Given: 4
-Receive: 45



« Reply #4 on: 18 April 2008, 06:11:41 »

Lost at sea is quite common.  The HMAS Sydney was lost in 1941 and it was only recently discovered, 67 years later
Logged
raddison
Igloo Addict
*********
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
United Kingdom United Kingdom

Posts: 5,137

Thank You
-Given: 7
-Receive: 22


« Reply #5 on: 18 April 2008, 20:32:44 »

When a ship is lost at sea its last position may be known, this all depends on was there an alarm signal sent (mayday) was the vessel using AIS (a tracking system) which course was the vessel on, where was it bound for and the big one what was the weather state.

now lets say a vessel is traveling due east and the sea is rough to very rough, the tidal flow is West Norwest and the weather is cyclonic 8 to gale 9. The vessel sends a distress signal at 08:00 and all contact is lost at 08:25 now the people that will look for that vessel could take over an hour to get to its last position, did it sink? could it hold station with its own power? which way would it drift or be towed by currents and winds?
If the vessel sank at what time did it sink? which direction was the vessel headed when it sank, what shape is the vessel, what type is the vessel. All these factors affect the outcome.

To say that everyone knows where the vessel is just can not be. The MCA & RNLI (for the UK) have the latest equipment available, AIS is new and shows the position, name, destination, speed etc to every vessel in the area that is using AIS which is a good thing, modern SART and ERIPB units alert stations around the globe on distressed vessels and sailors all good things. If a vessel with all this modern stuff goes down quickly or inverts,trapping every one and every thing all the modern technology in the world is of little or no use, even if a EPIRB floats to the surface it only signals ITS OWN position. (with luck survivors are close)

It has been known that a vessel was found 7 mile away from the last reported position and the hull was recorded as being pointing in the opposite direction to which the ship had been traveling.

When it is said that a vessel is lost it is not known where it is

I know I have dribbled on with this subject, though I feel I  have good reasons as this is close to my heart. and I say no more.
Logged

I may not be perfect, but being this close to it is spooky
PaigntonPearl
Wisest Iglooer 2005
SOMEBODY STOP ME !!!
***********
Offline Offline

Gender: Female
England England

Posts: 14,417

Thank You
-Given: 32
-Receive: 33


An English Rose


« Reply #6 on: 19 April 2008, 04:40:02 »

I stand corrected. It hits the fan
Logged

kevinbythesea
Administrator
Igloo Addict
*****
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 5,575

Thank You
-Given: 15
-Receive: 15



« Reply #7 on: 19 April 2008, 14:44:18 »

Weather looks good in Lunenburg which is just down the coast

http://cam.rumrunnerinn.com/webcam.jpg
Logged
raddison
Igloo Addict
*********
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
United Kingdom United Kingdom

Posts: 5,137

Thank You
-Given: 7
-Receive: 22


« Reply #8 on: 19 April 2008, 15:12:26 »

Is that where the PONG originated from sign10 sign10 toothy9
Logged

I may not be perfect, but being this close to it is spooky
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.4 | SMF © 2006, Simple Machines LLC
Seo4Smf v0.2 © Webmaster's Talks

TinyPortal v0.9.8 © Bloc | Sitemap
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.114 seconds with 39 queries.

Google visited last this page 05 January 2009, 23:04:34