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    • CURRENT LOCAL NOTICES TO MARINERS

      Here are the latest Local Notices to Mariners and NAV ALERTS that are relevant to ICW cruising in Districts 5, 7 and 8, the OBX, AICW, OWW, Keys, GIWW and adjacent waters. Open each LNM link for the USCG notice and a chart for each location. Listed north to south to north. NAV ALERTS will also be posted on our Homepage.

      For previous Local Notices, go to the Specific State or Region on our Homepage

       

      Week 06/26

      LNM: Off WW, Situational Update – Hazardous Weather Outlook for the Western Atlantic – Fri Feb 6, 2026 12:15

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:173.4, Pensacola-Mobile Daybeacon 20 Missing

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:172.9, Pensacola-Mobile Buoy 24 Missing

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:173.2, Pensacola-Mobile Daybeacon 22 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:404.2, Winyah Bay Channel Lighted Buoy 36 Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:979.5, St. Lucie Shoal Buoy 14 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: AIWW MM:988.0, St Lucie Inlet Daybeacon 17 Damaged

      LNM: AIWW MM:4.2, Elizabeth River Southern Branch Buoy 5 Off Station

      LNM: Off WW, Corpus Christi Cut A West Range Rear Light Extinguished

      LNM: AIWW MM:988.0, St Lucie Inlet Daybeacon 17 Destroyed

      LNM: AIWW MM:575.6, Fields Cut Light 50 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW Craighill Entrance Lighted Buoy 2 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off AIWW, Manteo Channel Lighted Buoy 6 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW, Manteo Channel Buoy 4 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW, Manteo Channel Buoy 2M Missing

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 95 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 90 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Bell Buoy 92 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Bay Bridge Marina Light 5 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Situational Update – Hazardous Weather Outlook for the Western Atlantic – Thu Feb 5, 2026 14:00

      LNM: GIWW MM:14.9, Pine Island Sound Daybeacon 42 Destroyed

      LNM: Off WW, Cape May Canal West Entrance Approach Lighted Buoy 8 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:465.0, TWDB Lighted Scientific Monitoring Buoy MB Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW, Hungar Creek Lighted Wreck Buoy WR9 Reported Adrift

      LNM: Off WW, Big Bend Channel Daybeacon 20 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:297.3, Upper Midnight Channel North Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 12 Relocated

      LNM: Off AIWW, Oregon Inlet Lighted Buoy 13 Relocated

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 94 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 91 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 91 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 95 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:462.0, Palacios Channel Daybeacon 24 Missing

      LNM: GIWW MM:108.0, Port Manatee Channel Outbound Range Rear Light Set TRLB

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:462.0, Palacios Channel Daybeacon 24 Missing

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:205.7, Santa Rosa Sound Buoy 99 Offstation

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:1,120.8, Ocean Reef Harbor Entrance Light 2 Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:675.4, Turtle River Light 4 Offstation

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:252.4, Choctawhatchee Bay Buoy 11 Missing

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:252.6, Choctawhatchee Bay Buoy 8 Missing

      LNM: Off AIWW, Chesapeake Channel Lighted Buoy 36 Extinguished

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:170.6, Pensacola-Mobile Light 39 Missing

      LNM: Wando River Range “D” Rear light Extinguished

      LNM: Off GIWW-West, Port Lavaca Channel Buoy 6 Missing

      LNM: Off GIWW-West, Port Lavaca Harbor of Refuge Buoy 10 Missing

      LNM: Off GIWW-West, Port Lavaca Harbor of Refuge Daybeacon 8 Missing

      LNM: Off GIWW-West, Port Lavaca Harbor of Refuge Daybeacon 4 Missing

      LNM: Off GIWW-West, Port Lavaca Harbor of Refuge Daybeacon 2 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:917.3, Indian River (South Section) Light 5 Destroyed

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:137.6, Chincoteague Shoals Lighted Buoy 2 Off Station

      LNM: Off WW, Situational Update – Hazardous Weather Outlook for the Western Atlantic – Mon Feb 2, 2026 14:44

      LNM: Off WW, NWS Tropical Atlantic Marine Weather Briefing – Feb 1, 2026 14:44

      LNM: Off WW, Situational Update – Hazardous Weather Outlook for the Western Atlantic – Mon Feb 2, 2026 14:44

      LNM: Off GIWW MM143.1 Honeymoon Island Ferry Dock Channel Daybeacon 2 Destroyed

      LNM: Off AIWW-DismalSwamp, Pagan River Channel Buoy 15A Offstation

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:1,155.9, Snake Creek Daybeacon 4 Off Station

      LNM: Off WW, Little Wicomico River Buoy 15 Offstation

      LNM: Off WW, Rappahannock River Light 26 Missing

      LNM: Off WW, Rappahannock River Daybeacon 18 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM:1,077.4, Dumfoundling Bay Daybeacon 54 Destroyed

       

      Week 05/26

      LNM: Off AIWW, Rudee Inlet Jetty Light 4 Missing

      LNM: Off WW, Western Atlantic

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:492.3, Victoria Channel Buoy 39 Destroyed

      LNM: Off GIWW-West, Tule Lake Channel F Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: GIWW MM:99.1, Mullet Key Channel Range Rear Light Repowered

      LNM: AIWW MM:917.3, Indian River (South Section) Light 5 Destroyed

      LNM: Off , South Padre Island Lighted Buoy 2 Offstation

      LNM: AIWW MM:630.9, South Newport River Daybeacon 136 Destroyed

      LNM: AIWW MM:797.3, Matanzas River Daybeacon 92 Missing

      LNM: AIWW MM464.8 Fort Sumter Range Front Light Extinguished

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:659.6, Hampton River Daybeacon 23 *** NO ISSUE ***

      LNM: Off GIWW, Colony Cove Daybeacon 8 Destroyed

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:658.6, Hampton River Daybeacon 14 Missing

      LNM: GIWW-East MM:368.9, St. George Sound Daybeacon 10 Missing

      LNM: Off WW, Cape May Canal West Entrance Buoy 12 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off WW, Cape May Canal West Entrance Buoy 14 Temporarily Discontinued

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:676.2, Turtle River Lighted Buoy 3 Offstation

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:667.3, Brazos Santiago Entrance Channel Lighted Buoy 2 Off Station

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:571.5, Jones Island Range Lighted Bell Buoy 17 Temporarily Relocated

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:566.3, Bloody Point Range Lighted Buoy 13 Temporarily Relocated

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:468.2, Bennis Reach Range Front Light Temporarily Relocated

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:468.4, Bennis Reach Range Rear Light Temporarily Relocated

      LNM: GIWW-West MM:533.6, Aransas-Corpus Christi Bay Cutoff Channel Buoy 27 Offstation

      LNM: Off GIWW MM:148.5, Anclote River Daybeacon 38 Set TRUB

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:667.3, Brazos Santiago Entrance Channel Lighted Buoy 2 Off Station

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:909.7, Banana River Daybeacon 7A Converted

      LNM: Off AIWW MM:903.1, Banana River Daybeacon 15 Converted to Floating Aid

       

      Week 04/26

      LNM: Off GIWW-West MM:667.3, Brazos Santiago Entrance Channel Lighted Buoy 2 Off Station

      LNM: AIWW MM:787.5, Matanzas River Daybeacon 51 Destroyed

      LNM: Off GIWW MM:148.5, Anclote River Daybeacon 38 Destroyed

      LNM: AIWW MM:454.6, Winyah Bay-Charleston Harbor Daybeacon 109 Off Station

       

      Week 09/25

      FWC Commissioners approve new rule establishing boating restricted area in Jupiter Narrows

       

      Week 39/23

      LNM: Alt ICW MM 7, Long Term Deep Creek Bridge Replacement, Dismal Swamp Canal, NC

      For previous Local Notices, go to the Specific State or Region on our Homepage

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    • Southeast Marine Fuel Best Prices as of Feb 04

      This week’s lowest current marina fuel prices as of Feb 04
              Diesel Range: $2.90 to $4.00 Lowest @ Port Consolidated in (Eastern Florida)
              Gas Range: $2.92 to $2.92 Lowest @ Galveston Yacht Marina in (Texas)
      Remember to always call the marina to verify the current price since prices may change at any time. Also please let us know if you find a marina’s fuel price has changed via the Submit News link.

      SELECT Fuel Type:
      SELECT Format:
      Lowest Diesel Price in Each Region

      Fuel Price Report Brought to you by:

      Ft. Pierce City Marina
      Ft. Pierce City Marina specializes in overnight dockage and 22 hour fueling.

      Lowest Diesel Prices Anywhere

      All Regions (Price Range $2.90 to $6.00)

      $2.90 Port Consolidated (02/02)
      $2.91 Osprey Marina (02/03)
      $2.96 Wacca Wache Marina (02/03)

      Lowest By Region

      Virginia to North Carolina (Price Range $3.35 to $4.25)

      North Carolina (Price Range $3.20 to $4.33)

      $3.20 Albemarle Plantation Marina (02/03)
      $3.53 Dowry Creek Marina (01/26)
      $3.57 Dudley’s Marina (02/03)

      South Carolina (Price Range $2.91 to $4.85)

      $2.91 Osprey Marina (02/03)
      $2.96 Wacca Wache Marina (02/03)
      $3.29 Myrtle Beach Yacht Club (02/02)

      Georgia (Price Range $3.00 to $5.00)

      Eastern Florida (Price Range $2.90 to $4.00)

      $2.90 Port Consolidated (02/02)
      $3.40 Pelican Yacht Club (02/02)
      $3.47 Anchor Petroleum (02/02)

      St Johns River (Price Range $3.79 to $6.00)

      Florida Keys (Price Range $3.69 to $5.49)

      Western Florida (Price Range $3.21 to $5.65)

      $3.21 Shields Marina (02/03)
      $3.55 Longboat Key Club Moorings (02/03)
      $3.59 Maximo Marina (02/02)

      Okeechobee (Price Range $3.61 to $4.12)

      $3.61 Gulf Harbour Marina (02/02)
      $4.12 Sunset Bay Marina (02/02)

      Northern Gulf (Price Range $3.30 to $3.71)

      Texas (Price Range $3.32 to $3.32)

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    • NHC: TROPICAL STORM CHARTS AND UPDATES

      The National Hurricane Center chart below updates automatically and shows the latest storm positions. Click the chart for the full NHC report. While port conditions are primarily for commercial mariners, they give a strong indication of the Coast Guard’s appraisal of the storm’s severity.

      Categories:
      • Category 1: winds between 74 m.p.h. and 95 m.p.h.
      • Category 2: winds between 96 m.p.h. and 110. m.p.h.
      • Category 3: winds between 111 m.p.h. and 129 m.p.h.
      • Category 4: winds between 130 m.p.h. and 156 m.p.h.
      • Category 5: winds of 157 m.p.h. or greater.
      Hurricane Season Port Condition Definitions 
      
      
      
      

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    • Cruisers’ Net Weekly Newsletter – February 6, 2026

      Cruisers’ Net Newsletter for this week has just been emailed via Constant Contact.
       
      If you want to view the newsletter but are not signed up to receive them automatically, you can view it at https://conta.cc/4rBaaYb or see it below.
       
      To automatically receive our emailed Fri Weekly Newsletter and Wed Fuel Report, click:

       


      Newsletter icons created by Freepik – Flaticon

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    • In Favor of a Second, Lower Anchor Beacon – Loose Cannon

      Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes that mariners with saltwater in their veins will subscribe. $7 per month or $56 for the year; you may cancel at any time.

       

         
       
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      In Favor of a Second, Lower Anchor Beacon

      ‘Riding Light’ Raises Question of Compliance Versus Comprehension

       
       
      Guest post
       
       
       
       
       

      READ IN APP

       
        
      Though we’ve never called it that, Loose Cannon’s Morgan Out Island 41 uses a “riding light” fueled by lantern oil.

      Neil Chapman is a lifelong sailor and founder of Boatshed, a U.K. based yacht brokerage with a big difference from its U.S. counterparts. He cruises on a Supertaff, a 1976 Rebel 41 ketch. This story was reprinted with permission from his BoatshedNeil Substack.


      There is a moment most sailors recognise. You are anchored for the night, the boat is settled, the water calm enough to reflect points of light.

      You glance up from whatever you were doing, perhaps your phone, perhaps a chart or a mug of tea, and you instinctively scan the water ahead. Not the sky. The water. The space where other hulls might be, where a dinghy might be crossing, where a boat might be swinging toward you on a different radius of chain.

      What you are looking for, whether you consciously realise it or not, is not brightness. It is meaning.

      In most modern anchorages, meaning has become harder to read.

      A Short History of a Small Light

      Traditionally, anchored vessels displayed what was often called a riding light. Not at the masthead, but forward, low enough to relate visually to the hull, high enough to clear spray and deck clutter, often hung from or near the forestay. It might sit eight or ten feet above the water. It would swing gently as the vessel rode to her anchor.

      This was not an affectation. It was practical design shaped by human behaviour. Most close-quarters traffic occurs at eye level. Most collision risk in anchorages is short-range, slow-speed, and human-scale. The riding light sat exactly where approaching eyes were already looking.

      Modern yachts, by contrast, tend to rely on a single all-round white anchor light at the masthead. On a 45-foot cruising yacht, that can mean a light 50 feet in the air. Bright, efficient, compliant. Also, in many cases, disconnected from the physical reality of the boat beneath it.

      This shift did not happen because someone decided riding lights were bad. It happened because masthead lights were easier to standardise, easier to certify, and easier to sell. One fitting, one wire run, one rule satisfied.

      That does not make the outcome either good or bad by default. But it does change how anchorages work as visual systems.

      The Anchorage Is Not Offshore

      Much of modern navigation equipment, and many modern conventions, are optimised for offshore conditions. There, range matters. Height matters. Visibility over waves matters. A high, bright, all-round light makes sense when vessels are separated by miles and closing speeds are high.

      An anchorage is a different environment entirely. It is crowded, slow, irregular, and informal. People move unpredictably. Dinghies weave through larger boats. Heads turn briefly, not deliberately. Attention is fragmented.

      In this context, the question is not “can this vessel be seen?” It is “can this situation be read quickly?”

      A masthead anchor light answers the first question well. It answers the second less well.

      Seen from a dinghy or a cockpit, a masthead light often floats, visually unmoored from the water. Depth cues are weak. It is not always obvious where the hull lies beneath it, or how far away it is. In a field of similar lights, the scene flattens. Everything becomes a constellation rather than a map.

      A lower riding light, by contrast, anchors the vessel visually to the water. It gives the eye a reference point that aligns with the way people actually scan their surroundings. It does not shout, but it explains.

      Share

      Compliance Versus Comprehension

      None of this is an argument against regulations. The collision regulations exist for good reasons, and modern anchor lights are entirely legitimate. The problem is not legality. It is the narrowing of seamanship to compliance alone.

      Over time, the incentive structure has shifted. Sailors are rewarded for ticking boxes, not for being readable. If the light meets the rule, the thinking often stops there. Day shapes are not hoisted because nobody looks for them. Nobody looks for them because nobody hoists them. The system decays quietly.

      This is not laziness in the moral sense. It is optimisation. People optimise for effort, cost, and perceived risk. In most anchorages, the perceived risk of miscommunication is low, until it isn’t.

      The riding light fell out of favour not because it failed, but because it was no longer required.

      Tech Fills the Gap, Imperfectly

      One might argue that this is all moot. We have AIS, chartplotters, radar, anchor alarms. The boat is visible electronically, even if the light is suboptimal. In many cases, that is true.

      But electronics change behaviour as much as they change capability. People rely on screens, sometimes too much. They assume others are doing the same. Visual signalling becomes secondary, a backup rather than a primary language.

      That assumption breaks down in precisely the moments when it matters most: fatigue, distraction, unfamiliar waters, visitors in hired boats, guests at the helm, people moving slowly and casually rather than standing a formal watch.

      Lights and shapes were designed to work in those moments. They require no battery beyond the one already powering the boat. They require no shared protocol beyond human vision.

      Is This a Problem, or Just Change?

      This is where the conclusion becomes less clear-cut.

      On the one hand, it is hard to argue that modern anchorages are dramatically more dangerous than those of the past. Boats are generally better built, anchors better designed, weather information better distributed. Many incidents are avoided through technology that simply did not exist before.

      On the other hand, near-misses are rarely recorded. Confusion, hesitation, and last-second course changes are accepted as normal. The fact that something “usually works out” is not evidence that the system is well designed.

      The loss of the riding light is not catastrophic. It is incremental. It makes anchorages slightly harder to read, slightly more ambiguous, slightly more dependent on attention being perfect.

      That earns it neither an A nor an F. A C feels about right.

      Culture Matters More

      Perhaps the most telling observation is not about lights at all, but about mindset.

      Vessels that still carry riding lights, hoist anchor balls, or otherwise signal clearly tend to be operated by people who think in terms of shared space. They see anchoring not as parking, but as participating in a system.

      This is not about tradition for its own sake. It is about recognising that boats communicate, whether we intend them to or not. The question is whether that communication is clear.

      The quiet tragedy is that as practices fade, so does the language to describe them. Many sailors today have never heard the term “riding light.” They are not rejecting the idea. They simply do not know it exists.

      When vocabulary disappears, so does choice.

      Where This Leaves Us

      There is no realistic call to reinstate old rules wholesale. Nor should there be. Boats are diverse, anchorages vary, and one size rarely fits all.

      But there is room for better thinking.

      Anchor lights could be designed with anchorage contexts in mind: adjustable brightness, secondary lower references, warmer colour temperatures. Education could place more emphasis on readability rather than mere visibility. Day shapes could be treated as meaningful again, not ceremonial.

      Most of all, sailors could be encouraged to ask a simple question when anchoring for the night:

      “If someone looks up for one second, will they understand where I am?”

      Sometimes the masthead light is enough. Sometimes it isn’t.

      The riding light was one answer to that question. Not a perfect one, but a thoughtful one. Losing it without replacing the thinking behind it feels like a missed opportunity.

      Not a disaster. Just a quiet downgrade.

      LOOSE CANNON covers hard news, technical issues and nautical history. Subscribe for free to support the work. If you’ve been reading for a while—and you like it—consider upgrading to paid.


       
       
       
       
       
       
      A guest post by
      Boatshed Neil

      Founder of Boatshed.com and sailor, plus I try to write stuff when I can 🙂
       

      You’re currently a free subscriber to LOOSE CANNON. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription.

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      © 2026
      411 Walnut St. No. 1944, Green Cove Springs, FL 32043
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    • Florida Boaters Now Have Access to Free State-Approved Online Boating Safety Course – BoatUS Foundation

      BoatUS

      BoatUS is the leading advocate for boating safety in the US and A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR. 

      Press Contact:  

      Alisha Sheth, BoatUS PR Manager 

       

       

      Blue text on a black backgroundAI-generated content may be incorrect. 

      Florida Boaters Can Now Take Free 
      State-Approved Boating Safety Course  

      At-home learning helps Florida boaters prepare for the water easily and conveniently  

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      FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – February 4, 2026 – The BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water has launched the only free interactive boating safety course for Florida recreational boaters.

      The course, which is approved by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and meets state boating safety education requirements, can be taken at the student’s own pace. After passing the exam, they can print their own certificate of completion for immediate use and will receive a lifetime card from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.  

      The course provides video demonstrations and sample common boating situations for students to interact with to better understand how to evaluate real-world instances. The learning experience includes storylines where the student “boats” to various places and includes interactive learning tools like flashcards and drag-and-drop features to enhance learning and retention. Course-takers will be able to design and name the virtual boat that takes them through the course and map how far they’ve “traveled” within it. 

       

      In the state of Florida, anyone born on or after January 1, 1988, who operates a vessel powered by 10 horsepower or more must pass an approved boating safety course and have in his/her possession photographic identification and proof of boating safety education completion issued by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. 

      The online BoatUS Foundation boating safety course and exam are approved by the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators (NASBLA) and recognized by the U.S. Coast Guard as exceeding the minimum requirements for the National Recreational Boating Safety Program. 

      “NASBLA approval of our Florida Boating Safety Course is a meaningful investment in boater safety, said Lynne O’Hearn, Program Manager at BoatUS Foundation. “Boater education is one of the most effective ways to prevent accidents, and this course gives Florida boaters the opportunity to build their skills to better enjoy Florida waterways safely.”  

      To take the course, visit BoatUS.org/Florida. For more information about Florida boating safety education, visit myfwc.com/boating/safety-education. 

      About BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water: 

      The BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water is a national leader promoting safe, clean and responsible boating. Funded primarily by donations from the more than 740,000 members of Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS), the nonprofit provides innovative educational outreach directly to boaters and anglers with the aim of reducing accidents and fatalities, increasing stewardship of America’s waterways, and keeping boating safe for all. A range of safe and clean boating courses – including the nation’s only free online boating safety course – can be found at BoatUS.org/Courses. 

      The views expressed in this media release are solely those of the sender and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cision.

      You are receiving this email because you were included on Geico (Government Employees Insurance Company)’s media release. To unsubscribe and stop receiving emails from this organization click here.

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    • Flash! Bang! Growing Pyrotechnic Answer to the Orca Threat – Peter Swanson

      Cruisers Net publishes Loose Cannon articles with Captain Swanson’s permission in hopes that mariners with salt water in their veins will subscribe. $7 a month or $56 for the year, and you may cancel at any time.

         
       
      Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more

      When all else fails, try journalism.


      Flash! Bang! Growing Pyrotechnic Answer to the Orca Threat

      Sailors Are Adopting an Illegal Tactic Because It Seems To Work

       
       
       
       
       

      READ IN APP

       
        
      Spiral of Life lies trapped on a beach in Portugal in early December.

      We’re not supposed to call ’em attacks because that, I guess, would be prejudicial. “Interactions” is better, we are told.

      So, let’s just say it: Orcas are the ones that have been doing the interacting and with extreme prejudice, as they continue to ram sailboats off Iberia’s Atlantic coast. There have been a reported 700 of these non-attacks since 2020.

      The latest interaction was a doozy. The headline-writer hadn’t gotten the memo: “Scary Moment as 30 Killer Whales Attack Family’s Yacht.”

      Can you imagine? Thirty of them!

      Except, it’s likely untrue. Most of the Orca incidents have involved a half dozen or so of the animals, dubbed the “Gladiator Pod,” but six or seven is bad enough.

      The headline-writer must have been including every orca in a 500-mile radius in that interaction, because there is no record of Michael and Laura of Spiral of Life Sailing (yes, a YouTube channel) asserting that number.

      Gladiators have been credited with sinking six or seven vessels, but without killing or injuring any humans (after which must be added the obligatory) —yet. Most of the sinkings appear to have happened from heavy blows to spade rudders typical on modern cruising craft.

      Share

      According to a December 30 article in the Independent, the Dutch couple was sailing between Porto and Lisbon “when their vessel was ‘violently’ buffeted by orcas at around 5 a.m.”

      “I disengaged the autopilot and grabbed the wheel and then we got hit again. The hit ripped the wheel out of my hands for a moment,” Michael said in a video about the incident. “I grabbed it back as fast as I could, and then I heard it—right next to the boat—splashing and that heavy breathing you never forget once you’ve heard.”

      (You can watch the episode below.)

      Having heard that orcas prefer deep water, they steered the Bavaria 46 toward the Portuguese coast. In the terror and chaos of the moment, however, they forgot how close to shore they were to begin with. Spiral of Life ran up onto the beach and flopped on her side, having been herded aground by swimming animals said to have the thought processing abilities of a human ninth-grader.

      With the help of locals, Michael and Laura were able to recover their boat and are having repairs made.

      Boom! Just Like That

      Meanwhile, a growing number of European sailors are adopting what you might say are teenage tactics to deal with a teenage threat. They are throwing firecrackers at the whales—the kind that will explode underwater.

      Think 1943: Destroyers versus Uboats.

      As EuropaSur has reported:

      Frequent orca attacks in the Strait of Gibraltar and the Gulf of Cádiz have led to a surge in sales of water fireworks in shops like those in Algeciras, despite the fact that it is forbidden to carry them and even more so to use them to scare away these or other marine animals.

      Consumer fireworks are generally illegal in Portugal, so cruisers are stocking up in the Galicia region of Spain in the north or Andalusia in the south. Petardos, as they are called, are even sold at nautical chandleries.¹

      Confronted by orcas, sailors have tried dumping sand or diesel fuel, activating pingers or motoring in reverse. No joy.

      According to yet another YouTube sailor, a sensible sounding guy who goes by the handle Reversing Entropy, fireworks are the only “anectdotally proven” countermeasure.²

      Every report you hear about people using this, you know, mouth to mouth, people are not putting this on the internet because, you know, it’s illegal. But everyone’s story seems to end the same way. They deploy the firecracker inside of the water and the orcas just swim away.

      We don’t want to hurt them. We don’t want anything bad to happen to them. We just want them not to sink our boat. This practice seems to be so effective that I hear from reliable sources that you can now buy in Spain in chandleries a kit that comes with the firecrackers and a big pole. You attach the firecracker to the front of the pole and you immerse them into water, let it explode, and then, you know, get it back.

      As it happens, orcas are extremely sensitive to sound and rely on it for hunting, communication and navigation using echolocation. And sound travels very efficiently underwater.

      A January 19 story in the U.K.’s Daily Mail quoted a study of the orca pod in question (lead by a female that scientists call White Gladys), which noted that the Gladiator Pod is an unusually quiet bunch:

      Orca pods are typically very vocal, especially when they are hunting or playing, but White Gladis and her team pulled apart stranded yachts in eerie silence.

      However, scientists have now discovered that this is merely a tactical choice. Like most pods, the orcas that live around Ibera and the Strait of Gibraltar specialise in hunting a single type of prey.

      Because these killer whales are experts in tackling the alert and flighty tuna, they have learned to hunt in silence and avoid any noise that might startle the fish.

      Naturally, the depth-charging of whales is driving environmentalists and animal rights groups crazy. Some sailors are against it, too, arguing that Gladys and crew will treat it as an escalation and respond by increasing the ferocity of their interactions.

      Which is giving orcas a lot of credit, but hey…who knows?

      “All you firecracker supporters are doing is making the attacks increasingly ferocious, and you’ll be justifying the use of more powerful explosives. Sadly, it’s already happening,” a Norwegian sailor wrote on an online forum.

      Did he say attacks?

      LOOSE CANNON covers hard news, technical issues and nautical history. Every so often he tries to be funny. Subscribe for free to support the work. If you’ve been reading for a while—and you like it—consider upgrading to paid.

      PLEASE SUPPORT THIS NEWSLETTER BY DRINKING HEAVILY. CLICK ON STORY TO ORDER WITH FREE SHIPPING.

      1

      As in: “Hoisted by his own petard.”

      2

      Having been “killed” in a mortar attack (in training with military flash-bangs), I can attest to the disorientation and fear that these can induce in a human being.

       

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      Harbour Town Yacht Basin, A CRUISERS NET SPONSOR, is ready for your reservation with newly renovated docks, upgraded electrical service and onSpot WiFi, also a CRUISERS NET SPONSOR. And, as always, numerous activities at the Sea Pines Resort are offered for your enjoyment, as you will see in the Event Schedule below. Hilton Head Island is absolutely marvelous any time of year.

       

       

       

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