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Review: The Trial of the Edmund Fitzgerald: Eyewitness Accounts from the U.S. Coast Guard Hearings

June 01, 2020 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Books & Book Reviews

Dan’s review of “The Trial of the Edmund Fitzgerald: Eyewitness Accounts from the U.S. Coast Guard Hearings” can be found in the Spring 2020 edition of The Nautilus, A Maritime Journal of Literature, History, and Culture.

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June 01, 2020 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall
Books & Book Reviews

When Momentum is the Enemy

January 15, 2020 by Guest User in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Making good decisions at sea is about much more than going with your gut.

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January 15, 2020 /Guest User /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Communicating with Crew

October 31, 2019 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Leadership calls for communication that is unambiguous, delivered in a way that motivates rather than alienates. It also calls for listening, which is a source of strength, not weakness.

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October 31, 2019 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Good Samaritan Towing

August 28, 2019 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

If you spend enough time on the water, then sooner or later you will wind up at one end or the other of a towline. Mechanical failure, running out of fuel, and wind dying are common enough that eventually we either need a Good Samaritan or we become one.

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August 28, 2019 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

See and Be Seen

June 21, 2019 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

What I find most interesting about AIS is its capacity to foster new patterns of human behavior and perception.

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June 21, 2019 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Pulling Weight

May 20, 2019 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Preparing for an anchor to drag actually begins long before it happens.

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May 20, 2019 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Does Your Anchorage Rate?

February 27, 2019 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Most folks have a fair idea of what makes a good anchorage. You need shelter from the elements and room to swing 360 degrees. But what else?

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February 27, 2019 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Matters of Weight

February 21, 2019 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Since we cannot see ground tackle at work on the seafloor, it’s important to visualize what is going on down there, how it all works and why it sometimes doesn’t.

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February 21, 2019 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

A Period of Transition

August 29, 2018 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Having respect for how transitions affect awareness can help you avoid a situation where your head is in the old game, when a new game has already begun

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August 29, 2018 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Positive Stability

June 27, 2018 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

Positive stability is a vessel’s tendency to resist capsizing. Negative stability? Not so much.

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June 27, 2018 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Make A List, And Check It Twice (At Least)

April 25, 2018 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

A checklist serves as an unchanging memory prompt when detail and sequence are critical.

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April 25, 2018 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Depth Perception: It's More Then What's Under The Keel

April 20, 2018 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

When visual references are reduced by darkness or fog, depth plays an even more important role in cross-referencing.

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April 20, 2018 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

A Night In The Ocean, Plenty To Think About

January 24, 2018 by Guest User in Featured Article: Soundings

Are you strong enough to survive 13 hours in the water? That's exactly what this writer did when he chaperoned an ocean survival course.

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January 24, 2018 /Guest User /Source
Featured Article: Soundings

Bridge Resource Management for Small Ships: The Watchkeeper's Manual for Limited Tonnage Vessels

December 15, 2017 by Guest User in Books & Book Reviews

Your vessel may be equipped with the most advanced technology and the most powerful engines, but the failure to apply the basic principles of bridge resource management can still prevent you from getting where you are going.

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December 15, 2017 /Guest User
Books & Book Reviews

Tall Ships Down: The Last Voyages of the Pamir, Albatross, Marques, Pride of Baltimore and Maria Asumpta

December 15, 2017 by Guest User in Books & Book Reviews

For all its romance, the tall-ship renaissance has a tragic side. Working from official documents, survivor and expert interviews, and his own tall-ship experience, Parrott re-creates the losses of five sail-training vessels.

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December 15, 2017 /Guest User
Books & Book Reviews

Homeward Bound

December 09, 2017 by Guest User in Costa Rica

Dan has done such a stellar job entertaining you for the last three months that I’m nervous to even weigh in. However, there are a few interstitial stories still untold that will round out the saga.

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December 09, 2017 /Guest User
Costa Rica

Line 'Em Up: Navigating With Natural Ranges

December 06, 2017 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings

A natural range exists when two charted objects — one closer and one farther away — visually align and appear to meet, forming a line of position, or LOP.

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December 06, 2017 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings

Know What To Do Before The Flood

November 01, 2017 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Seamanship Column: Soundings, Electronics Column: P&M

For me, the words damage control conjure claustrophobic scenes from the 1981 German U-boat film Das Boot. Begrimed men, stripped to the waist in rising water, struggling to plug gushing pipes that depth charges ruptured, all while the prying ocean tries to entomb them in their fragile biosphere. 

 
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November 01, 2017 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Seamanship Column: Soundings, Electronics Column: P&M

The Vestas Wind Debacle

September 19, 2017 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Electronics Column: P&M

I firmly believe that a good pair of eyes is the most indispensable navigational device currently available, so long as you can see, and there is something to be seen.

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September 19, 2017 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Electronics Column: P&M

How to Use Electronic Charts

September 19, 2017 by Lisa Arhontes-Marshall in Electronics Column: P&M

E-Cartography is fabulous stuff, but it can be deceptive. Here’s how to avoid the pitfalls.

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September 19, 2017 /Lisa Arhontes-Marshall /Source
Electronics Column: P&M
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