NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Yesterday in Newcastle
From: Peter Fogg
Date: 2007 Jun 10, 20:34 +1000
From: Peter Fogg
Date: 2007 Jun 10, 20:34 +1000
We've just had a good southerly (storm) here. Among all the other destruction and mayhem, a ship has been pushed onto the beach at Newcastle, the second biggest city in the state of New South Wales and a major port, about 100 miles north of Sydney. A correspondent from another state wrote to me: > I caught a snippet of an interview with the manager of the shipping company > who insisted that the crew had done nothing wrong. It had full anchorage > etc - it had just been the power of the sea at the time which forced it to > break its moorings and sweep it towards land. Who really knows, but I could > believe that might be the case. And I answered: The story that we've been hearing is that the Port Authority of Newcastle warned and re warned the 50 odd ships that are more or less permanently (individual ships are filled and leave and are replaced) sitting just off the coast (sometimes for weeks at a time) waiting to load coal (a capacity constraint of our economy that depends on this major export) that the wild weather was coming and that they should weigh anchor and stand well out to sea. For boats this is elementary common sense: in bad weather the safest place is out in the open ocean. Close to shore is dangerous. Particularly when the full force of the wind and waves is doing its best to push the boat onto the land. All but eleven of these ships took the advice and left. Of those eleven, two got into serious trouble. One spent an anxious day or so clawing itself off Stockton Beach just to the north of Newcastle. At one stage I heard it was only 700 metres from the beach, but eventually it was able to regain safer sea room under its own power. This other didn't make it. People living in the Newcastle beachside suburb of Merewether could see black smoke billowing from its stacks as it loomed into their sight through the driving rain, just offshore, running its motors full ahead and fighting to keep its nose pointing into the weather, but the 50 knot winds and the 18 metre swells overwhelmed its efforts and pushed it onto a reef just offshore of Nobby Beach, Newcastle's main surfing and recreational beach. Incidentally, the local surfers have been quick to speculate about whether its bulk will now improve the waves there. The other factor that may have been fatal is that this boat disregarded the Port Authority's advice for the ships to take on sea-water ballast. If it had it would have been sitting deeper in the water, its screws would have had better 'bite' and the vast bulk of the ship would have been less affected by the wind and waves. The Port Authority has no power to order ships' behaviour (although they are under the command of the PA's pilots coming into and out of port) while out at sea, although that is now being looked at. Apparently this ship didn't want to lose its place in the coal loading queue. Or be bothered, having pumped out all its sea ballast in readiness for loading coal, to fill its holds again. The crew consisted of two Korean officers and 15 Filipino ratings. It was a brand new ship operating under a 'flag of convenience', meaning that the standards of its operation were the minimum, far below the standards that Australian shipping lines have to comply with. The maritime union has said, quite justifiably, that it was an accident that was waiting to happen, and that it has been warning for years that such an incident was likely to be the result of the federal coalition's (our present right-wing rulers) determined efforts to break the power of the maritime union and encourage such 'flag of convenience' ships to operate in Australian waters - even for coastal trade, which was previously virtually restricted to Australian operators. > > This ship may not have much damage to it. However, I believe that salvage > companies have a low retrieval rating of freeing ships like this that are > firmly wedged into sand. They are difficult to free because of the suction > forces, the ship itself has no power, and the logistical difficulty in > moving sand under water. If they can't shift it after removing all cargo > and fuel, saying a few prayers and pulling with a few dirty big tugs at high > tide, then there's a strong chance that it will end up as scrap. A sad end > to a ship in my opinion. Remember the Cherry Venture? There is another ship called the Sygma that still sits rusting on Stockton Beach as the result of another good storm years ago. The immediate problem is the 700 tonnes of fuel oil and other pollutants sitting within this one on Nobbys Beach. Helicopters have been loading pumps and other equipment onto it. Stay tuned. It was certainly a good storm. Apparently it was the biggest we've had in 30 years, and its true that when we were living at Bondi Beach about 30 years ago we saw a few good storms. This one was not just severe but it lasted for about 36 hours, much longer than most. We drove and walked along the beaches of the Eastern Suburbs today. Parks are covered in leaves shredded from trees, the roads near the beaches lie under sand drifts that are being cleared; everywhere there are signs of damage to anything at all fragile left to the mercy of the weather. And wouldn't you know it? As always, it seems, after what seems like good rain, comes the news that little enough of it has fallen within our water catchment area in the Blue Mountains just beyond the coastal plain. Annick says they have obviously put the dam in the wrong place. It needs to be on the coast. Maybe we could put a dam wall across the Heads, the entrance to Sydney Harbour, and wait for this new huge dam to fill with fresh water. Within the 3rd photo can be seen people on deck, gesticulating to the hovering helicopters ... --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ To post to this group, send email to NavList@fer3.com To , send email to NavList-@fer3.com -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---