5/20/2013 Baltimore Harbor
It’s Monday evening and I’m in my bunk.
We leave early in the morning, for the Atlantic! At our muster this
morning the Chief (1st) Mate, Jill, explained the watch system we
will use during the trip. Every boat while underway needs sailors to stand
watch.
While the POB2 is underway we will be on a three watch
system. The crew is divided into thirds and each day will be divided into six –
four hour segments. A Watch is assigned to “On” for two four-hour shifts each day;
that means to be dressed and on deck, and ready to perform any tasks needed to
run the boat. Another watch is required to be on “Standby”, that is able to be
on deck quickly should they be needed to help with major sail changes or any
other condition that requires extra crew on deck. The last watch is “Off” and
probably in their bunks.
“A” Watch consists of Jill, the POB2’s Engineer, a deck
hand and two guest crew. Seth Page, @25, from Vermont (maybe New Hampshire) is
the Engineer; his duties as such are basically overseeing the boat’s mechanical
systems. He learned many of his engineering skills from his father. Andrew
Elmaleh, the deckhand is also @25. Andrew is from New Jersey and six or eight
other place on the planet, a musician and a genuine entertainer. The other
guest crew is Erin C, an architect from Hamilton (or maybe Kitchener), Ontario.
All of A Watch except for myself are in their 20s. I’m 65 in 2013.
A watch usually begins with a muster 15 minutes before
the watch actually begins. At the muster the leader reviews what can be
expected during the next four hours. During the watch the leader assigns tasks
as they become necessary.
The main task underway is steering the boat in the right
direction and not running into anything, either above or below the water.
Determining the right direction is the watch leader’s responsibility in
consultation with the captain. On the POB2 there are paper and electronic
charts showing shorelines, channels, water depths, etc. There is also radar
which shows any nearby solid objects - boats, shoreline. There is and an
electronic GPS system that shows the location of every commercial or any large
(like the POB2) vessel in the vicinity. The steering of the boat is done by
everyone on watch, usually in one hour increments.
The regular crew watches over the guest crew until we
there was enough confidence in us. I didn’t resent being watched over by
someone who could have been my grandkid. Really, I didn’t.
There were also times when the POB2 crew was on a “two
watch” system. That was when the POB2 was at a dock, participating in a boat
show, with half the crew on, and the other half off. The shows were the main
purpose of the POB2’s trip to and through the Great Lakes. More on this later.

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