Tuesday, July 25, 2017

A wreck on the ‘Magenta Line’

Accident scene : This is Marker 38 as shown from a YouTube video shot from a different boat,
going the other way at another time.

From PassageMaker by Peter Swanson

In December 2013, I wrote stories about the “magenta line” on our nautical charts depicting the Intracoastal Waterway, and now lawyers want me to answer questions for a court case on the subject.

Here’s what I wrote in one of the articles:
For years experienced boaters have known that the magenta line should be viewed with skepticism as an indicator of depth. But at the same time they appreciated the fact that it provided an easy way to follow the ICW’s route as it winds through the labyrinthine systems of creeks, rivers, and canals that comprise the waterways of the coastal South.
The problem is that some novice boaters have no compunction about speeding down that dotted line like it was the center lane of I-95, and, as NOAA officials recently wrote in their request for comments on the Federal Register, “Numerous examples can be found where the charted Intracoastal Waterway Route (“magenta line”) passes on the wrong side of aids to navigation; crosses shoals, obstructions, shoreline; and falls outside of dredged channels, etc.”
It’s a fact that anyone who follows the magenta line closely enough and far enough will go aground, as I recently demonstrated at a known trouble spot on the ICW at Crooked River in Georgia. The fact that I intended to follow the line until I touched bottom softened the blow, but some hard-charger would have experienced the nautical equivalent of a car wreck.
The Feds removed much of the magenta line from government charts, citing safety concerns, but the electronic cartography industry—Navionics, C-Map and Garmin—did not follow suit.
Customers like the magenta line, they say.

 Red Marker 38 with magenta line on Navionics webmapping

Then came that “hard-charger” I was predicting. On Dec. 27, 2014, a year after that article, Pedro Torres of Tampa was westbound on the St. Lucie canal at 21 knots.
Seaduction, his Wellcraft 36, was equipped with a Garmin chartplotter, and Torres was riding the magenta line as many of us do.
Unfortunately the line veered to the wrong side of Red Marker 38, so instead of taking the mark properly to starboard, Torres took it to port.
The boat exited the channel and slammed into a shoal.
And the result was the equivalent of a car wreck without the benefit of air bags.
Torres’ wife Christine was thrown below on impact, suffering injuries to her spine, neck and skull, including a badly bleeding head wound and broken bones.
She was airlifted to a nearby hospital in critical condition.
Florida Fish & Wildlife investigators concluded that Torres’ inexperience and inattentiveness contributed to the accident but that he had broken no laws.
Last year, Christine Torres filed suit against Garmin, alleging that the company “knew that its decision to retain and display the magenta line as the ‘recommended route’ without any ‘ground-truthing,’ changes, corrections or warnings would place its users and their innocent passengers in grave danger.”
Garmin fixed the error by moving the magenta line to respect Red Marker 38, and prepared to defend itself in court.
Pedro Torres, Garmin’s lawyers argue, had behaved like a knucklehead when he mindlessly followed a colored line on his plotter.
They insisted that the court assign part, if not all the blame for his wife’s injuries to him in its final decision.
Okay, many of us waterway veterans are nodding our heads in agreement right now, aren’t we?
But let’s look at it through the eyes of a South Florida jury, particularly after it’s heard from some of the experts rounded up by Torres attorney Michael Eriksen.
One is Anthony Andre, a Ph.D who researches human factors, ergonomics and usability in product design. His expertise includes the concept of “automation trust.”

From a court document:
Dr. Andre is expected to testify that (1) Garmin’s public relations and marketing information invites trust in Garmin and its products; (2) It was feasible for Garmin to perform a human factors evaluation of the subject interface, taking into account the principle of automation trust; (3) Garmin’s failure to employ human factors specialists to do so did not comply with generally accepted principles and guidelines applicable to interface design; (4) Garmin’s continuing use and display of known chart “errors and defects,” such as a “recommended route” drawn on the incorrect side of channel markers, was similarly contrary to the referenced human factors principles…
Andre’s attack goes on and on.
Lee Alexander is another witness with a Ph.D and a heavy hitter in electronic charting, theory and practice.
His testimony would center on “ground truthing” and the fact that Garmin had the means to determine the accuracy of the magenta line but failed to do so.
So what does a jury—perhaps lacking in judgmental old salts—make of all this? Garmin could well have a problem.
The government got rid of the magenta line because it was dangerous.
Garmin did not.
Pedro Torres spent, say, $20,000 on a Garmin electronics suite.
Why would he not trust his marine chartplotter the way the jurors hearing his case trust the GPS in their cars?
After all. if you hover the Garmin plotter’s cursor over the magenta line, the words that pop up on the screen are: “Recommended Route.”

By the way, C-Map has a correct line at Marker 38, while Navionics appears to have three to choose from, one of which cuts the mark.
I have brought this to Navionics’ attention so it can be fixed.

 This is the magenta line at the accident scene prior to NOAA's decision to remove the line.
Note that the scale of the chart is such that there's no way to conclude that the line might pass to the wrong side of Red Marker 38.
Zoom in on an electronic chart, however, and there is literally room for error.

 View in the GeoGarage platform (NOAA RNC 11428) today


View in the GeoGarage platform (NOAA ENC) today
So what’s my role in the Torres case?
Back in 2013 I made a query to Garmin about the magenta line, which sparked an internal debate. The resulting chain of emails has become evidence in the case.
The lawyer for Christine Torres says he wants to question me about the articles I wrote at the time and my Garmin query in a deposition.

Here’s what I asked a Garmin spokesman back in 2013:
Wes,
The federal government is eliminating its “magenta line” from East Coast ICW charts. NOAA says this “best route” indicator is no longer valid, so it is eliminating the line while it considers what to do next. The question for Garmin is this:
There are three choices Garmin has. It can eliminate the magenta line from its cartography; it maintain the line as it is now, even though the government no longer stands behind, or it can develop a third option.
What is Garmin going to do and why?
We know what the answer was.
The line stayed put, but not everyone inside the company was entirely comfortable with that.
One Garmin employee, Ryan Casanova, was of two minds.
“If NOAA doesn’t stand behind the line, then I am not sure how we could go on publishing it, if we don’t know how reliable it is.”
But then Casanova agreed with colleagues who argued that as Garmin incorporated NOAA updates in the future, the line would eventually disappear from their cartography as well—not soon enough to save Christine Torres, however.
Meanwhile NOAA is working to restore verified magenta lines to its charting section-by-section.
“Since the magenta line was pulled from our charts we have had the policy to reapply it to small craft charts after undergoing a review process to ensure that the line does not direct boaters into hazards areas. There are still some charts that have not been updated. The labels and mile marks are still retained to indicate to boaters the general location of the ICW,” says Kyle R. Ward, southeast navigation manager, NOAA Office of Coast Survey
“Some harbor charts do not display the ICW because the intent of those charts is for deep-draft vessels. In these cases the ICW is usually still marked with labels and a channel framework.”
I’ll continue to keep you updated about the case of Torres v. Garmin as I await my waterboarding at the hands of the attorneys.

Here's that video we promised:

Covering 130 miles and 16 hours of continuous shooting starting at mile 100 of the Okeechobee waterway, a go pro time lapse of the Caloosahatchee River, Lake Okeechobee, St. Lucie River, Hobe Sound and the lights of Palm Beach.
Shot aboard Nyati, a 52' Viking convertible on its way to the Viking Yachts Shipyard

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Monday, July 24, 2017

Is the U.S. ready for an Arctic oil spill?

 Researchers with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and various other insitutions work on the ice of the Chukchi Sea.
In the background is the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker, the Healy.
This is a field campaign of the NASA-sponsored ICESCAPE.
(Photo Credit: Ms Marie C Darling (RDECOM))

From WorldPolicy by Valerie Cleland

This article is part of an Arctic in Context series featuring Winter 2017 Arctic Research Fellows from the International Policy Institute, in the Henry M. Jackson School at the University of Washington.
This Arctic research program is dedicated to improving the transfer of research and expertise between higher education and the policy world in the area of global affairs.

“It seemed truly like the ending of a world.
Seabirds were dying by the thousands in the muck.
Vast stocks of salmon and herring and halibut would perish next.”
This description in National Geographic of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill is meant to be dramatic.
As we’ve seen time and time again, oil spills have devastating impacts on the environment, wildlife, and local communities, and the effects linger long after the cleanup crews have gone home.

Today, as melting sea ice makes oil more accessible, the risk of a spill is moving north into Arctic territories.
While a major oil spill has yet to occur in the Arctic, the Arctic Council began to look seriously at oil spill prevention and recovery after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill—the largest marine oil spill in history—which the United States failed to stop from gushing into the Gulf of Mexico and was unable to clean up entirely.
If this type of spill were to occur in the Arctic, the lack of major nearby ports and unforgiving weather would make response much more difficult, not to mention the devastation to a delicate and already stressed ecosystem.
The Arctic may hold up to 13 percent of the world’s untapped oil, but due to its fragile and dangerous environment, the U.S. and Canada both placed a moratorium on new oil leases in the region in December 2016.
However, under the Trump administration, oil allies Rex Tillerson and Scott Pruitt may influence the decision to lift the ban on oil drilling in the Arctic.
Fortunately, some preventative measures have been taken by Arctic states.
To avoid an Arctic oil spill and to formulate a response plan in the event that one occurs, the Arctic Council and its eight member states signed the legally binding Agreement on Cooperation on Marine Oil Pollution, Preparedness and Response in the Arctic in 2013.

Three polar bears approach the starboard bow of the submarine USS Honolulu while it is surfaced 450km (280 miles) from the North Pole.
Sighted by a lookout from the bridge of the submarine, the bears investigated the boat for almost two hours before leaving.
(U. S. Navy Photo by Chief Yeoman Alphonso Braggs)

But even with this agreement, is the U.S. ready for an Arctic oil spill?
The agreement is meant to enable cross-border sharing of knowledge, resources, and equipment to assist in the cleanup of large-scale disasters.
Rarely do we see preventative policies enacted before a major disaster, especially on an international scale.
The agreement states that each country must identify areas of special ecological significance that may be at risk, have appropriate equipment ready to be deployed, and determine who in the government can request international assistance and who in other countries can respond to such requests in a timely manner.
The agreement also stipulates that in an emergency, regulatory barriers to shipping across borders must be removed—a direct response to the issues that arose after Deepwater Horizon.
But perhaps most practically, countries are advised to carry out joint exercises to improve the ability of responders to work together.
In the Arctic, where limited knowledge about the behavior of oil in an icy environment makes the potential effects of a spill difficult to predict, practice is especially important.
The United States ratified the agreement in 2016, a noteworthy accomplishment given the challenge of ratifying international pacts in Congress.

 A cleanup worker walks through the oily surf at Naked Island on Prince William Sound on April 2, 1989, a week after the beginning of the oil disaster that occurred when the tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground and spilled 11 million gallons (42 million liters) of crude oil off Alaska, near the oil pipeline tanker terminal in Valdez Harbor.
AFP / Chris Wilkins

The first joint exercise with Canada occurred in 2015 before the ratification, solidifying the relevance of the international Arctic Council agreement in U.S. domestic law.
The United States has also identified sensitive areas, participated in additional joint scenarios, and ensured oil spill equipment is available.
But although the country has made progress, the 2014 consensus from the National Research Council (NRC) and other organizations is that Washington is not fully prepared for the all the unknowns that come along with an Arctic oil spill.
To Buck Parker, a member of the U.S. delegation that helped draft the Arctic Council’s agreement, one of the largest issues with the Deepwater Horizon incident was the United States’ difficulty accepting help from other countries.
While other countries offered resources and equipment to stop the spill and work on cleanup, questions arose about whether these offers would violate U.S. coastal shipping laws.
France, for example, offered oil dispersants that are not approved for use in the U.S.
This specifically raised concerns about the Jones Act on international shipping and whether this law was hindering the United States’ ability to accept aid for oil spill cleanup.
Part of this coordination must be directed at gathering more information about what an oil spill in the Arctic would entail.
The NRC report’s recommendations reflect the Arctic Council’s push for joint exercises, and it advises that experiments with spilling oil in the Arctic will be necessary to better understand how oil behaves in cold and icy environments.
Further, mapping and monitoring of the Arctic Ocean need to be improved: Updating nautical charts, mapping the coastlines and seafloor topography, and collecting other data could be vital for ships to efficiently respond to a spill.
Research from the NRC shows that increased U.S. Coast Guard presence would allow for a faster response to a spill given the remote location of the Arctic.
It is unclear under the Trump administration whether the Coast Guard budget would allow for an increased presence.

Shell's drilling rig Kulluk ran aground in the Arctic in 2012, and the company abandoned exploratory drilling in the region in 2015 after finding little oil or gas.
Credit: Staff Sgt Aaron M. Johnson/U.S. Air Force

As of now, the closest U.S. Coast Guard station to the Arctic is in Kodiak, Alaska, more than 900 air miles and 2,000 nautical miles away, a trip lasting about five to six days.
The Arctic Council’s agreement has laid the foundation for cooperative environmental action, but if the Arctic nations truly want to protect the already fragile ecosystem of the High North and the people who call it home, this is only the start.
Given the lack of infrastructure, unpreparedness for response, and lack of knowledge about oil in icy environments, a spill in the Arctic today would likely be worse than the Deepwater Horizon incident.
The Arctic Council needs to build on the agreement and nations must follow through on their commitments before drilling begins again.
While U.S. and Canadian legislation has closed the opportunity for new lease sales and drilling in the Arctic, the risk remains.
The cost of preventing and preparing for a disaster is a small price to pay when compared with the cost of a large oil spill and its long-lasting, catastrophic ramifications.

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    Sunday, July 23, 2017

    Ghosts of the Arctic

    Ghosts of the Arctic was the type of passion project that my boyhood dreams were made of.
    Our goal was to venture out into the beautiful frozen expanse of Svalbard, in winter, to search and document polar bears.
    During the shoot we experienced temperatures that were never warmer than -20ºC and frequently plummeted down as low as -30ºC + wind chill factor.
    Many days we drove over two hundred kilometres on our snow mobiles in very difficult terrain and conditions as we searched for wildlife.
    The bumpy terrain left us battered, bruised and sore.
    We experienced three cases of first and second degree frostbite during the filming as well as a lot of failed equipment and equipment difficulties as a result of the extreme cold.
    Each day involved 14-16 hours in the field.
    We had batteries that would loose their charge in mere minutes, drones that wouldn't power up and fly, cameras that wouldn't turn on, steady-cams that would not remain steady, HDMI cables that became brittle and snapped in the cold, frozen audio equipment, broken LCD mounts, broken down snow mobiles and more.
    We existed on a diet of freeze dried cod and pasta washed down with tepid coffee and the occasional frozen mars bar.
    But in spite of the conditions, it was one of the most rewarding shoots we have all been involved in. We hope you enjoy it!

    Saturday, July 22, 2017

    The hunt

    Flying fish picked off from above and below : 
    Flying fish can make powerful, self-propelled leaps out of water into air, where their long, wing-like fins enable gliding flight for considerable distances.
    It appears these flying fish are in a no win situation, picked off above the surface by frigatebird's and devoured underwater by the dorado.

    These amazing bottlenose dolphins have adopted a unique way of hunting fish.
    Taking advantage of the low tide, these super smart mammals are able to beach themselves on mud banks, and attack in perfect synchrony.

    We track a hungry but determined polar bear as it seeks to ambush a plump seal.
    With the odds stacked against it, this scrawny looking bear will need to pull off an amazing manoeuvre if it's to get a well earned meal.

    Epic footage of one of Earth's most feared predators, the great white shark.
    Each dawn, cape fur seals leave their colony to go fishing.
    To reach the open sea they must cross a narrow strip of water which is patrolled by the largest predatory fish on the Planet.

    Friday, July 21, 2017

    Golden age: The inside story of history's first explorer yachtsmen

    Nahlin (Panama Canal)

    From Boat International by Caroline White

    From amateur ecologists to charismatic aristocrats and war tourists, the first explorer yachtsmen blazed a colourful trail.
    now, says Caroline White, a new generation follows in their wake...

    "Brandy, prussic acid, opium, Champagne, ginger, mutton-chops and tumblers of salt-water,” listed Frederick Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava, in a letter to his mother.
    This was the roll call of remedies with which he was trying to cure his (apparently sporting) friend, Dr Fitz, of seasickness – they were on board the Marquess’s schooner Foam in 1856, making a choppy passage from Scotland to Iceland.
    Today, the pair would likely have zipped in by plane or helicopter to meet the yacht in Scandinavia – leaving the crew to endure the North Sea’s roil alone.
    But when the Marquess embarked on his adventure, no such option existed.

    “If you wanted to go off and see the world, having a yacht made that possible in a way that no other means did,” says William Collier, managing director of classic yachts specialist GL Watson.
    And so an off-grid transport problem – which lasted until the end of WWII – created a long golden age for the explorer yacht.

    For some, a yacht simply enabled long-range travel in comfort: in 1931 Lady Yule and her daughter visited New Zealand, Australia and Miami on 91 metre motor yacht Nahlin.
    For others it meant expedience: after he’d raced his Camper & Nicholsons schooner Wyvern in the first America’s Cup, in 1851, Lord Marlborough lent her to his son Lord Churchill, who sailed from the Cape of Good Hope to Australia in the record time of 36 days (he was speeding to the gold rush).

    For others still, a boat was a ride to a far-flung shore: “Yachts went to the Crimean War because it was fun, stuff was happening,” says Collier.
    “Lord Cardigan, for instance, of the Charge of the Light Brigade, lent his yacht [Dryad] to a chum who sailed out to watch the Siege of Sevastopol.
    Once the yacht was out there it was also comfortable digs for Lord Cardigan.”

    The 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava's schooner Foam

    Then there are the true adventurers, such as the Marquess.
    The writings on his voyage through Iceland and Norway are steeped in the charm that made him a spectacularly successful diplomat.
    Amid the geysers he bumps into Prince Napoléon Bonaparte – plus a vast entourage – and has his crew whip them up a feast of game and plum pudding from his meagre stores, an incident he describes with a what-else-could-I-do matter-of-factness.
    Later, he is pleasantly surprised when the monarch and his entire cabal ditch their plans and follow his boat to Jan Mayen and Spitsbergen.
    He’s an elegant and entertaining writer, chronicling the evening sea “burnished, darkling into a deep sapphire blue against the horizon”, and “contorted lava mountains, their bleak heads knocking against the solid sky”.

    Many of his ruminations are also salutary tips for owners going off grid today – including the “rapid transformation” from heaven to hell that weather makes at extreme latitudes and thus the all-importance of when to go.
    “[This] fully accounted for the difference I had observed in the amount of enjoyment different travellers seemed to have derived from it [Norway].”
    The Marquess published a book of his writings, Letters From High Latitudes, which is still readily available.

    Albert I en route to discovering Princess Alice Bank in the Azores

    Other yacht explorers left a broader legacy.
    The first yacht of Prince Albert I of Monaco, the 200-tonne sailer Hirondelle, sparked a lifelong passion.
    He founded Monaco’s Oceanographic Institute, tracked whales, studied fish and discovered Princess Alice Bank in the Azores.
    During a 1921 speech at the Washington Academy of Sciences, his language conveyed a raw wonder for “the awful spaces of the ocean, which almost daily yielded tons of beings unknown to science – abyssal cephalopods or pelagic crustacean”, and fish with “luminous organs”.

    Prince Albert I of Monaco’s Hirondelle

    Experience also placed Albert ahead of his time in understanding the effects of over-fishing and “steam trawlers”.
    “The latter now graze the very soil of continental plateaux, plucking off the sea-weeds and ruining the bottoms that are fittest for the breeding, as well as the preservation, of a great many species.”
    He even suggested the “reserved district principle” – marine reserves of the sort now championed by Blue Marine Foundation.

    A member of the Queen of Scots party shows off the Galápagos wildlife

    On the other side of the Atlantic, wealthy Americans were undertaking their own naturalist adventures.
    In the late 1920s, socialite and diplomat Anthony J Drexel Biddle Jnr took his yacht Queen of Scots on an epic trip from Bayonne to North Africa, the Canary Islands, Cape Verde, Barbados, the Panama Canal and the Galápagos.
    The family hunted, fished, photographed Talamanca Indians and collected specimens for the British Museum.
    William Kissam Vanderbilt II, meanwhile, made his voyage to the Galápagos in 1926 on his 65 metre yacht Ara, a former French warship.
    He discovered a new species of shark and reeled at the bounty of natural wonders but, like Prince Albert, grew concerned for their safety.

    Back home he wowed guests with a slide show of his trip, but finished with an odd shot.
    His biography, by Steven H Gittelman, calls it “a night scene where the dilapidated shore met the sea’s edge and a long trail of the moon was reflected in the water”.
    Populating it were forlorn goats and an emaciated donkey.
    These were the introduced species and “by virtue of numbers they extinguished all in their path.
    Nothing, regardless of its rarity or beauty, was spared, until finally the invaders too began to starve.” It was an ecological warning to his world-roaming and powerful guests.

     The Golden Shadow is the research vessel.
    Tasked with providing accommodation and diving support for over 30 scientists at a time, from all over the world, it is a vital component for any ocean research on this scale.
    Take a guided tour with the director of the Khaled Bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation, Phil Renaud, and go below decks to see what's inside.

    Today’s explorer yacht owners have taken up their forebears’ legacy.
    One group of owners have helped realise Albert I’s dream with the world’s largest marine reserve in the Chagos Islands.
    In 2015 Paul Allen recovered the bell of the battlecruiser HMS Hood, sunk by the Bismarck in 1941, using his yacht Octopus and her state-of-the-art remotely operated vehicle – it will be restored as a tribute to the 1,415 lives lost.
    And a couple of years ago, explorer yacht Arctic P ventured further south than any vessel in history.
    Improvements in transport – and stabilisers – mean there is less call for prussic acid and tumblers of seawater.
    But with a burgeoning list of ultra-tough superyachts hitting the water, for a new breed of yacht-bound explorers, the golden age dawns again.

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