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East
Coast Alerts
Second
Sailboat in a Month Hits Overhead Power Line and Burns: Again, we don’t know the facts of this specific case and make no implication or inference as what happened. Pay attention. There are many areas where the twists and turns of the ICW and other navigable channels can be confusing if you’re not paying close attention and carefully following updated charts and watching for aids to navigation. Also be careful to avoid the tendency to “Follow the Leader”.* *Italicized text above and below indicates our comment. Plain text is copied from the Notices to Mariners or other sources given. Lake Okeechobee
Drying Up: Hobucken
NC Area ICW, Grounding Follow-up: In May 2007 the skipper of a sailboat reported to the Coast Guard Station at Hobucken that it hit something very hard in the middle of the channel at approximate ICW Mile 160.5, between red daybeacon “24” and green can “25,” south of Hobucken, NC. The chart indicates an “obstruction reported” in this area and shows the shipwreck symbol next to the channel. We were a few miles away, also northbound and within VHF range, so we followed the conversations between the captain and the US Coast Guard Station at Hobucken. Apparently a woman aboard the boat was injured seriously when the boat stopped so suddenly. We were concerned that there might be an obstruction that both had hit. The skipper who just wrote to us apparently was to the north of the first position, off the point north of Green “23”. He thinks that he hit a shoal on the west side of the channel there. He mentioned that Google Earth showed the shoal at the edge of the channel very clearly. The area of the ICW where Gale Creek and the Bay River meet should be transited carefully. Strong winds can affect the water levels here, and channels can shoal at any time. If you do run aground in the channel here or anywhere, or find shallow water where it’s not supposed to be, it should be reported to the Coast Guard. And if you hit something besides the bottom, it should be reported. Make sure that you have accurate coordinates or can identify the nearest markers. LORAN C-FUTURE
OF LONG RANGE AIDS TO NAVIGATION The U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) announces that it intends to prepare a Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) on the Future of the Long Range Aids to Navigation (LORAN) Program. The current system (LORAN-C) is a low frequency hyperbolic radionavigation system approved for use in the U.S. Coastal Confluence Zone (CCZ) and as a supplemental air navigation aid. LORAN-C provides navigation, location, and timing services for both civil and military air, land, and marine users in the CONUS and Alaska. The PEIS will evaluate the environmental effects of alternative futures for the LORAN-C Program, and aid the USCG in its decision on whether to terminate or continue to operate and invest in the LORAN-C system. Publication of this notice begins a scoping process that will identify and determine the scope of environmental issues to be addressed in the PEIS. This notice requests public participation in the scoping process, establishes a public comment period, and provides information on how to participate. DATES: Public meetings will be held August 15, 21 and 23, 2007, in Washington, DC, Juneau, AK, and Seattle, WA, respectively. Each meeting will consist of an informational open house from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. and a public scoping meeting from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The public meetings may end later than the stated time, depending on the number of persons wishing to speak. Comments and related material must reach the docket on or before August 31, 2007. The entire public notice is available online at: http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/fedreg/a070717c.html Dredging in
Cape May Canal: Woodrow Wilson
Bridge , DC Area, Construction Continues: New Temporary
Navy Pier East of Little Creek, VA: Diving Operations
in Hampton Roads Again: Cape
Fear River Entrance Uncharted Shoal: Dredging
in Jacksonville FL Area: Norfolk Dredging Company will commence maintenance dredging in Jacksonville Harbor, Jacksonville, Florida on or about August 1, 2007. The dredging will be conducted in Bar Cuts 3, 4, 5, 8, and 9. Several navigational aids will be relocated or removed during this project. All mariners are urged to transit the area with extreme caution. Please review future Local Notice to Mariners for updates on this project. For further information please contact Mr. Paul Lougheed at (757) 547-9391. Norfolk Dredging Company will commence dredging operations in the St Johns River on or about August 7, 2007. The dredge ATLANTIC will be dredging in the main channel between Mayport Basin Channel Buoy 2 and the intersection of the Intracoastal Waterway (ICW) in the vicinity of Miles Point LB 24. The dredge operator will standby on VHF Channel 13 and 16. Traffic should call thirty (30) minutes prior to expected time of passage. All mariners are requested to stay clear of the dredge, barges, scows, tugs, derricks and operating wires about the dredge. Operators of vessels of all types should be aware that the barges are held in place by cables, attached to anchors some distance away from the equipment. Buoys are attached to the anchor so that the anchors can be moved if needed. This project will be conducted twenty-four (24) hours per day, seven (7) days a week until completion on or about November 10, 2007. For further information please contact Mr. Steve Newton at (757) 547-9391. More
Semi-Submersible Testing: Navy Activity
off Port Everglades, Ft. Lauderdale FL: The United States Navy, South Florida Testing Facility (SFTF) will commenced cable laying operations on July 19, 2007, 1 NM east of the Port Everglades Inlet, then 0.3 NM south of the channel. The cable (s) will be suspended for four (4) to six (6) hours above the water as they are reeled to shore from the cable laying vessel 3000 feet off the beach. The cable will be outfitted with floats 100 feet apart and navy divers will placed the cable on the bottom at safe locations and remove the floatation at or near the position:, 26-01-15.720N 079-52-38.100W. This operation will continue until August 4, 2007. All vessels near the support vessel should use caution when transiting near the area. For further information please contact Mr. Anthony Bush at 954) 926-4032. South
Fork New River, Ft. Lauderdale I-95 Bridges Reduced Clearance: This is a Reminder: Do Mariners Still Need Weather Information on HF Radio? We think so. The following is from USCG LNMs 18-22: PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD ON CONTINUED NEED FOR HF RADIO BROADCAST OF WEATHER WARNINGS The US Coast Guard is seeking public comment on the need to continue providing high frequency (HF) radio broadcasts of weather forecasts and warnings. Public comment is necessary in order to assess the demand for the HF radio broadcasts in each of three forms: (1) radiofacsimile; (2) voice; and (3) simplex teletype over radio (SITOR), also known as narrow band direct printing (NBDP). The infrastructure necessary to provide these services has exceeded its useful life expectancy; the equipment is no longer manufactured, repairs are difficult to accomplish, and spare parts generally are not available. Comments should be submitted by August 24, 2007 and addressed to Commander (dpw) 5th Coast Guard District., 431 Crawford Street, Rm.100, Portsmouth, VA. 23704-5004. Commentary: While most people we know on boats with SSB radios (HF transceivers) now rely on other means to receive weather information than the traditional weather fax and voice broadcasts, there are still some boaters who use HF receivers (much less expensive that a transceiver) to access these services. We don’t now how many. HF receivers also provide a helpful alternative when other sources fail. We hope that those of you who still rely on these methods for receiving weather information will respond to the call for Public Comment. This information is not to be used for navigation. Consult the latest charts and Local Notices to Mariners and use prudent seamanship. Conditions may change. Any person or entity that uses this information in any way, as a condition of that use, agrees to waive and does waive and also hold authors harmless from any and all claims which may arise from or be related to that use. Copyright 2004-2008 Tom Neale |
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