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Water Sports and the Environment

Return to Table of Contents

1

Video

2

Water Skiing Wakeboarding and Tubing

3

Hunting or Fishing From Boats

4

Environmental Concerns

5

Encounters with Whales and Marine Mammals

6

Aquatic Nuisance Species

7

Locks

8

Maritime Communications

9

Continuing Your Boating Education

10

Chapter Review

MARITIME COMMUNICATIONS

Communications are a critical but often weak link in the Search and Rescue (SAR) system. Distress and safety communications include distress, urgency, and safety calls and messages. Boaters in distress have a variety of methods, ranging from sophisticated electronic devices to waving a piece of cloth, for alerting the SAR system.

VHF-FM-FM Radios (fixed and handheld)

Very High Frequency (VHF-FM) radios are the most common of all maritime communication devices. The U.S. Coast Guard and the New Jersey Marine Services Bureau monitor VHF-FM channel 16 twenty-four hours a day.
  • VHF-FM radios have a useful range of 20-25 miles, based on “line-of-sight”.
  • The height of the radio antennae is an important consideration and determines the range of the radio.
  • The hand-held units are portable with short antennae; the range is limited to 5 miles. At a minimum, VHF-FM radios should have channels 16, 09, 06 and 22. Additionally, channels 24-28 and 84-88 are for contacting marine operators and channels WX-1-3 are the NOAA weather channels.

Communicating a Distress Call

VHF-FM Channel 16 is the hailing and distress frequency. Contact communications between boaters may take place on channel 16, but boaters may not stay on channel 16 for non-emergency conversations. Emergency communications on the VHF-FM radio should be transmitted on channel 16. If an emergent situation is discovered, all boaters should immediately put on a life jacket.

VHF-FM Radio or Citizen Band Radio

Announcement procedure: Say Mayday, Mayday, Mayday; this is the vessel ___________, I repeat this is the _________, again the ________ (state the name of your vessel three times).
State your call sign. Then begin your message. Say "Mayday, the vessel ___________, (state your position - preferably latitude and longitude or by geographical reference), the nature of your emergency, a description of your vessel and the number of people on board your boat.

Say again the name of your vessel and your call sign. Stay calm and speak slowly. Then UNKEY the microphone (release the button) and wait for a response. If you get no response after a minute or so, repeat the entire broadcast. Get life jackets on everyone, gather emergency supplies, get your flares and any other signaling devices ready.

STAY CALM - you, as Captain, need to set the example for your passengers. If you hear a MAYDAY, stay off the radio and record the information given in the broadcast. Once a mayday call is issued, the code of "Silence" goes into effect.

Cellular Phone

Boaters using cellular phones to communicate a distress call need to inform 911 dispatchers of the same information as if calling from a VHF-FM radio. The 911 system is arranged to give emergency response personnel a physical address of the caller. This is not possible when using a cellular phone, and a very detailed description of the location must be relayed from the boater.

One of the major drawbacks of using a cell phone in an emergency situation, when compared to a VHF-FM radio, is that a cell phone call is only heard by one person whereas everyone with in range of the VHF-FM transmission can hear the call.

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