
Originally Posted by
John Arton
Charles
I do not think that anyone can say that sailing on troop ships during WW2 would give you a lesser training in semanship than, say, a cargo vessel.
Seamanship to me is more than just learning spicing, rigging bosuns chairs, stages, operating hatch covers etc. etc.
Although a very important part of the job obviously, seamanship to me is as much as this plus that "feeling" that we all learnt. i.e you had the feel for the ship, you could almost foretell when theat particular wave was going to beak on board and wash down the deck, you always had one hand for youself and one for the ship which gave us a far safer working enviroment than any Health and Safety Training/check lists can ever give one of the modern generation will get. You felt the beat of the engine and even as a deck officer you could tell that there may be a problem the second you felt a change in that beat. Also in bad weather you knew when your ship was labouring and it was time to reduce speed to avoid heavy pounding, or to alter course to ease her movement and so avoid damage to the ship and cargo.
In my last years at sea I very rarely came across Deck Officers who had that feel for the ship and the number of times I had to spend hours unecessarly on the bridge in open waters just because my officers could not recognise that she was pounding too heavily and that they needed to reduce speed to avoid this pounding, is inumarable. This despite my very clear standing orders that they all signed as understanding them and my many attempts to teach them how to judge the seas and the effect on the ship, they all seemed terrified of actually touching the pitch controller or phoning the engine room to tell them to reduce speed and would just let her go on pounding until either myself, or sometimes the Chief Eng., would tell them to reduce as they were putting to much load on the engine or causing unecessary pounding. What used to frighten me even more was that if they could not reduce speed to avoid pounding, would they ever reduce speed to avoid a close quarters situation or to assess the situation in say, a crossing of traffic lane situation.
Anyway thats my view Charles, summing up seamanship is not just about spices, knots, flags etc. but encompasses a far greater and possibly a skill that cannot properly be put into words that the layman can understand, yet all of us who went to sea in our era's will understand immediatley once they saw how you went about your daily task whichever department you were in, be it deck, engine or catering.
rgds
Capt. John Arton (ret'd)