Saquatucket Harbour 41:40N 70:04W

Millybrown
Mark Hillmann
Mon 3 Nov 2008 02:18
Like Falmouth, this is another tiny harbour.  Saquatucket, what a good name, is out on Cape Cod. A fishing harbour with posh residential housing, it is also a retirement area.  The man who signed me in retired from his full time job when the Germans bought the company.  He does voluntary environmental work now, but is also part time assistant harbourmaster. 
 
One of the things he does, is go out in the harbourmaster's launch to give assistance.  He did not say "rescue", but there will certainly be an overlap.  It was on the news that a fishing boat (a dragger - what we would call a trawler?) sank near where I was two days ago.  By the time the helicopter and Coastguard vessel arrived the crew of three had been taken off by another fishing boat.  Perhaps this explains the large number of Coastguard vessels.  They do rescues: They are not all busy intercepting Palestinians.
 
Last time I saw the coastguards in the UK they boarded me from a launch in the Scillies.  When I asked why they were on a local boat company launch, not a proper coastguard one, they laughed and said theirs had all been sold.  Rescues in the UK are done by the RNLI, in specialist inshore rescue or all weather boats.  At Maryport, where the RNLI does not provide a boat, fundraising has provided the "Maryport Rescue Boat".  This is a specialist boat to the same specification as an RNLI inshore boat  and crewed in the same way, by local volunteers.  
 
There may be a lot of coastguard launches over here, but it surely cannot compare with the coverage by the RNLI in the UK? I would expect our crews, generally with enormous seagoing experience, but also local to the areas they cover, to be a match for the US full time crews covering bigger areas. 
 
Their coastguard launches do not look like the RNLI all weather boats.  They look more like their lobster boats:  High speed ones, that we would call harbour launches.  When I ask what the lobster boats do in bad weather, they say they have big engines and get into harbour quick.  Our normal fishing boats expect to ride out gales at sea and our all weather lifeboats go out in almost any weather.
 
The weather is different over here too. The winds are very variable, but with much offshore wind giving small waves.  There seems (in my brief experience) to be a clear three or four day cycle.  Good weather, with light winds, lasts a long time, but bad weather comes as a "storm" lasting only a few days.    
 
Should I conclude that the lobster boats and Coastguard rescue boats are adapted to the conditions here, the same as our fishing boats and lifeboats suit our conditions?  Or are our boats just better? 
 
Milly Brown was built as a cruiser racer, but has a reputation as a good heavy weather boat:  Which is why I bought her.  Iceland buys second hand RNLI boats, not New England coastguard boats.  They need to do rescues in bad weather as well.