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Article: Head Wetting Incident

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    Head Wetting Incident

    20 Comments by David mullins Published on 28th March 2022 08:09 AM
    Head wetting incident

    1962 en route from Portishead to Boca Grande Florida for a bulk cargo of Sulphur. The ship was the MV Macaulay of Chine Shipping.
    Accommodation and engine was aft with 5 forward hatches. This was my third trip on this great little ship and I had recently been promoted to Bosun.
    Initially I joined her in Manchester together with a good seafaring mate Fred McDermott. Fred and I had spent several years together sailing with Manchester Liners, Prince line, Haines and Royal Mail lines.
    Outward bound we were light ship routing a familiar course, possibly for the last time since recently being accepted by the NZ shipping federation to work from their Wellington office. My fiancé Ann and I were moving down there on completion of this trip.

    By the third day the weather was reasonably moderate with an increasing stronger westerly, directly on the nose. Reports were coming in of a massive depression building to the southwest of us. By the time the second mate started his 12 to 4 the depression had grown to full hurricane strength.
    It was estimated that if we maintained our current course and heading, we would avoid the main body of the hurricane. By the time of the third mates am watch started, the hurricane veered significantly and headed straight toward us. The Skipper thought the hurricane would continue to veer northwards but as usual “the best made plans of mice and men” didn’t come to fruition.
    We hit the full force by noon the following day.
    The Skipper was permanently on the bridge, stood by the engine room telegraph in his slippers quietly giving the the man on the wheel orders either “port 10”, mid ships or “starboard 10” to keep the bow directly into the weather and at the same time pushing the telegraph to either “full ahead” or “stop engines”. As each massive roller rose up above the knights-head, he’d apply “full ahead” to climb the mountain of water that grew above us. At the crest of the roller he’d apply “stop engines” as we surfed down the opposite side.
    It was totally fascinating looking out over the foredeck as these massive mountains of water approached surrounded by streams of white salt foam like huge railway lines covering the whole surface area. Solid green water constantly flooded across the foredeck which at times appeared to have disappeared.
    In an effort to break the air of fear and concern, the Skipper, with a wry smile remarked, we would all have our occupations changed from merchant seamen to marine alpinists.
    During that first night a deep thumping sound developed from the bow section of the ship and as time wore on the sound increased in volume and was now accompanied by thud which reverberated throughout the ship.
    As he finished his “4 to 8”the mate called a meeting on the bridge with myself the Skipper and second mate to discuss the anomaly,.
    He stated that as he observed the bow during his watch period, striking an oncoming wave the crash and thud appeared at the same time. He deduced one of the anchors had slipped on the windless brake which may have not been fully deployed or possibly faulty and was no longer tight in the hawsepipe which obviously could cause damage to the hull, but even worse, if coming completely free altogether and plunging into the sea would be totally catastrophic, since it was shackled on the final chain link in the chain locker.
    The plan was to breakout a heavy duty bottlescrew, a section of chain, a 2 pronged anchor chain claw and a couple of 10 ton shackles. Tools needed, a long marlin spike and a steel conduit pipe together with a couple of lunatics to do the job.
    As the ships Bosun and the gravity of the situation, it was obviously my place to do the job.
    It was agreed that the ships speed would be kept to the absolute minimum, just enough to maintain steerageway. The ships horn would be used to indicate when a monster wave was about to hit engulfing the focsle in green water.
    Fred and I prepared ourselves for the task. We both wore heavy duty wet weather gear of trousers and jacket and in addition we tied rope whammies around our ankles over our sea boots and around our waists and hips in an effort to stop the high powered wind getting into our wet weather gear.
    After waiting for a reasonable break we ran forard temporary taking cover between the hatch combings till we reached the lamp trimmers locker under the focsle head to pick up the equipment we needed. The noise under the focsle was tremendous as the anchor struck the hawsepipe aperture.
    Finally with hearts in our mouths we ascended the companionway to the focsle head. Moving forward was either on our knees or on our stomachs grabbing hold of anything solid en route.
    Once under the windless we lashed ourselves to the windless housing.
    As the bow leapt into the air, one felt the g force on the rise and the negative g as she plunged back into the trough.
    We had just shackled the chain and bottlescrew to a deck eyebolt when the bridge sounded the fog horn. We both crawled as far under the windless as we could. The bow was unable to fully ride over the looming monster and as the solid green sea swept over the focsle head, it was touch and go whether we could maintain our grip on the windless base.
    After several similar events we managed in stages to locate the claw through one of the link sections of the anchor chain then attaching it to the open bottlescrew, we slowly turned the marlinspike in the bottle screw until it was necessary to put the conduit onto the marlin spike to attain more leverage. Slowly the chain was drawn up and into the spurling pipe and the banging and crashing ceased. After checking the windless brake we made our way aft with a deep overall feeling of accomplishment and relief and perhaps, a little wet.
    Wonder what the health and safety executive would make of this.

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  3. #11
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    Post Re: Head Wetting Incident

    JS Yr.#8 TEKNIK PUTRA. Happy to oblige.She originated as AURICULA IN 1980.
    Details with pics (as Auricula) HERE
    History 1995 converted to Research Vessel.
    ON LR/IMO ID Year Name Tons Change Starke Ref. Registered Owner Port
    7803334 7803334 1980 AURICULA 982 Royal Navy GBR
    7803334 7803334 1980 LOWLAND SEARCHER 1009 1995
    7803334 7803334 1980 TEKNIK PUTRA 1009 1997
    7803334 7803334 1980 PUTRA 1009 2018
    ANOTHER LINK HERE Regrettably no details of changes ofowners' names are given.
    Last edited by Graham Shaw; 6th April 2022 at 09:09 AM. Reason: Amplifying and enhancing details.

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  5. #12
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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    Real gutsy

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    Hi Kenneth, thanks for your kind comments. I do have another incident which I’ll get around to posting at some stage. It involves knocking together a 16 foot boat out of cargo dunnage and after swinging it over the side, together with Fred, we were washed down the St Lawrence from Troi Rivičre towards Quebec.
    No oilskins required but maybe breakout your Sou’wester.
    Cheers David

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    #11 A belated thanks Graham must have missed. She must have been named the Lowland Searcher when she arrived Singapore. Name change to Teknik Putra when We took over and British crew flown home. Surprised to see she was already under the Panama flag ? I had to go to the Panamanian Consulate to do the paper work for panamanian certificate , which never received , so have always thought I have had a double sailing around under false pretences , which would’nt surprise me at all. Should still be getting a percentage of his wages as a sign of good faith. No morals these people. Cheers JS
    R575129

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    Many thanks for your article concerning MV Macaulay I sailed on this vessel prior to your trip as 3rd engineer many memories had a similar experience while serving on the Tennyson on route to Savannah Georgia with a cargo of cattle fodder which was ruined due to bad weather great little ships Sulzer engines I left to take up shore employment

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    Small world Alex!! Your ref to Sulzer engines, I seem to remember being told that these engines were the Rolls Royce version of marine engines. Most of the ships I served on had 3/4 legged Doxfords but not being an engineer, I don’t really know.

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    I was deck boy on that trip.

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    This brings forward and reminds me of a similar interesting occurrence which happened to the "Wiltshire" during a Transatlantic voyage in 1971. Anyone whom had the misfortune to be sailing on Liquid Petroleum Gas Ships will know that sailing in ballast at the best of times was never comfortable. Anyway the story I relate to was after a storm US Gulf bound, the second mates with who was a "health freak" did her laps early morning, came back to their cabin. She announced to her sleepy Husband "you know those two thingies at the front of the ship were not there anymore", he murmured back let me sleep its nothing. Anyway the carpenter did not do his rounds of sounding the tanks that morning and it was only late afternoon that it was discovered that both of the anchors had run out to full length and being prevented from being lost by the bitter ends. Well everyone may not know that the windlass cannot retrieve anchors out when the chain is out at full length at full length ( particularly if they have hydraulic motors as the relief valves lift) the way around it is either to use with a jury rig the Cargo winches or very difficult to use at sea when rolling around use the forward mooring winches, but on a Liquid Gas Carrier, these proposals are either not available, limited or non existent, so we had to divert to the Azores with both Anchors dangling on the end of the chains and slowly bring them up, by placing them on the ground, and assist the windlass with the mooring winches. i.e not a good scene, and resulted in the stern letter " We fail to Understand". So yes I do know what happens when the Devil Claws get loose in bad weather .

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    Hi James, seem to remember a little Geordie deck boy who almost drowned me when we were in Bucksport in Maine USA, when I was one of the lads teaching you to swim off the jetty.
    Would you be him by any chance?

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    Default Re: Head Wetting Incident

    Yes that was me, and I still can't swim. I hope you and and your mate are keeping well.

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