Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 February 2014

Movie Review: All is Lost

A colleague at work mentioned that I should watch "All is Lost" as preparation for our sailing trip, as I might learn a few things. I though I was well prepared with my sailing skills, offshore survival training, emergency preparedness training, medical course and risk reviews, but you never know if you can learn a trick or two from an old dog i.e. Robert Redford.


*** Spoiler Alert ***

Clearly Captain Rob is not the most safety conscious sailor and he did not follow the RYA schooling. Here are some observations:
When he detects the leak, the first thing captain Rob does is not calling a mayday on VHF, setting of the EPIRB satellite beacon, stuffing the hole with anything that is at hand, or pulling a sail over the leak, or getting the life raft and ditch bag ready or even starting the bailers. No, the first thing he does, is getting the mainsail down, an action that does not help him whatsoever. Then he manages to collide into the container a second time.

Finally, after some agonizing minutes, where all the good advice I shouted out at captain Rob was ignored, he manages to tack the other way and the hole is safe and clear above the water line. At this point captain Rob is safe, and he could use the time to pull a sail on the outside of the hull, and start stuffing things on the inside.



What is Captain Rob doing, when he is going down into the boat to have a nap when the boat is still half full of water? Captain Rob's safety thinking is highlighted by the fact that:

  • He needs to cut a handle for the bailing pump, and does not have one to hand
  • He has to connect up his VHF antenna, it was not even connected before the collision.
  • What is that about when he call a S.O.S.? Mayday Mayday Mayday is how you start an emergency call?
  • Why does captain Rob not keep his sat phone in a waterproof bag?
  • Why is he not wearing a life jacket?
  • Where are the storm tactics? Captain Rob  does not use his sea, anchor that he earlier used to connect to the container, streaming warps, taking the seas from the behind, running the engine to keep up with the waves, and worst of all, he is still not wearing a life jacket.
  • He is finally deploying the life raft, when the boat is floating high up on the water. Man up Captain Rob, and instead of sissily deploying the raft, deploy the bailer!
  • Really! Getting into the life raft, when the boat is still high up in the water! Not only are did you just earn the title of coward the size of a blue whale, you just took a very unnecessary risk. BTW, where is the ditch bag? At least stock up with water and supplies before you make the jump.
  • Filling up the fresh water canister with the sea water pump from the sink?
  • In clear weather, with a boat that is not sinking, you leave the boat again? Man up and start pumping the water out you sissy!
  • In the life raft, for the first 24 hours, do not eat or drink, get your body in energy preservation mode
  • Where is your hand water maker our solar still?
  • Where are you keeping that knife Captain Rob? The correct place in in a bag at the end of the painter line in the water. No wonder you managed to sink your life raft.
  • Way to go: Setting of the flare without safety glasses or gloves. This is really the time to use the parachute flares.
  • Shooting flares when there are no vessels in sight?
  • Setting your only life raft on FIRE!

Katadyn Survivor 35, a hand operated water maker.



Some miscellaneous observations:
  • who is steering when he is down below, he clearly does not have an auto pilot...
  • It is beyond me, how with so little wind the boat even generated enough speed to create a hole like the one that was created.
  • How did the boat turn over? the waves where not even that high....
  • Man Over Board by yourself is Game Over..... to get back to the boat is extreme luck! 
  • How did he let go of the mast, without even cutting the shrouds or the faulty VHF connection
  • Where did the swell go after the big storm?
  • How did you manage to sink the life raft!
  • The hacked together water maker has little chance of actually working in wave motion.
  • Captain Rob can suddenly read the map and writing without his glasses.
  • There is land in the background! where is that on the map.
  • Where did the glass bottle come from?
Final rating: Too agonizing to watch without writing a blog post with what Captain Rob does wrong and Hollywood gets wrong. No expert sailors consulted in the making of the movie. It turns out that actual courses are a much better preparation than Hollywood...

This would have been on the movie screen, if I was there for the life screening.


Tuxington asks: "Wherrrrrre is the ships cat?" Lunington says: "To be purrrrfectly honest, Captain Rrrrrrrob cannot likely keep his cat alive in even the best of conditions. Miauw!"


Thursday, 5 December 2013

Gear: Ditch Bag Contents

For those of you wondering what on earth is a "ditch bag" and why we are writing a post about it, I would refer to the survival story of Maurice and Marilyn Baily whom with their family survived at sea in a life raft for 117 days http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_and_Maralyn_Bailey.  Their story of survival was heroic and possibly as a result of their extensive training and preparation of a ditch bag.  While I hope that we never have to board a life raft, its worthwhile to spend some time putting together that container of supplies which would, at the very least, give us peace of mind our chances of survival and rescue would be improved.  I refer to the RYA (Royal Yachting Association) sea survival handbook for the items we chose to include, plus some additional extras for our feline crew members.



Contents


  • Ditch bag x2 - must have positive flotation and be waterproof with easy to carry handles
  • Portable EPIRB x1 - Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon  This is to send out a signal to satellite that we are in trouble and need rescue
  • Handheld VHF (with extra batteries) x1 - To communicate with vessels on within the horizon that might have their VHF turned on
  • Selection of flares
  • Waterproof LED flashlight (extra batteries) x1 -  to make light signals at night 
  • Signal mirror x1 - send light signals during the day to ships or helicopters
  • Portable watermaker x1 - make fresh water from seawater to stay hydrated
  • 3 weeks of food - high energy bars that have all the vitamins/minerals..Ill pick the chocolate ones of course
  • Extra pair of prescription glasses and sun glasses
  • Survival books (RYA manual)
  • First aid kit and medicine
  • Sunscreen and lip balm
  • Spare cell phone with working sim card
  • Boat papers, passports, credit cards, cash, driving license, house keys, boat keys, car keys, insurance papers, cat passports, vaccination recoords important documents on thumb drive in a dry bag
  • Duct tape x1 roll - just ask the Mythbusters how long you can survive on an island with just a roll of duct tape.  Dont want to be without it.
  • Lighter in waterproof bag - fire = warmth = cooked dinner on deserted island
  • scissors - to cut packages easily, kept with medical kit
  • Empty water bottles - storage of watermaker water and rainwater
  • Small fishing kit - to catch some sushi while in our life raft to go nicely with the chocolate energy bars
  • Toothbrush and feminine products
  • Tin opener for food tins from galley
  • rearming kits for life vests
  • resealable polyethylene bags to keep things dry
  • Large plastic bin liners
  • Cutting board to cut any caught fish and extra galley food
  • Inflatable cushions to use for pillows and back support
  • kitchen knife and sharpener
  • Food tins from galley
  • Handheld compass to read bearings from the raft
  • handheld GPS to relay coordinates to rescuers
  • Dinghy or liferaft pump
  • Sailing or leather gloves
  • Spare warm dry cloths in dry bags
  • Swim goggles
  • Thermal underwear in dry bag with cloths
  • paper and pen in sealed bag
  • sea sickness pills
  • chemical heat packs
  • Cat toenail clippers to prevent clawing up inflatable boat
  • Supply of pet napkins to clean them up
  • 3 weeks supply of wet cat food in sealed packets
  • Towels/sponges to dry things out