I know of two different vessels that have gone from P.S. to Ketchikan in the last 1 - 2 weeks, anchoring for a few hours at night then continuing.
1st one was a diesel trawler, 2nd one was a twin O/B boat that did
stop for fuel but did not get off the boat at all, even at the fuel dock.
That is where it works...I am searching my mind and I don't think I've seen a trawler that big before. Lots of commercial vessels in my area but definitely nothing that big. That's something I'd expect to see off the coast of Alaska.
I am searching my mind and I don't think I've seen a trawler that big before. Lots of commercial vessels in my area but definitely nothing that big. That's something I'd expect to see off the coast of Alaska.
When this started to unfold, I posted about it and the post was quickly removed.This is the closest I have heard of any one being approved to move a boat across the border.
When this started to unfold, I posted about it and the post was quickly removed.
In mid-April, a 34’ American Tug spent shake down time in the San Juans and crossed the border on Apr 18, bound for AK.
She cleared in Sidney, overnighted in some marinas, was denied access and/or moorage at a few places and crossed from Prince Rupert to Ketchikan on May 1.
Begs the question; why was this permitted?
If this were a legitimate land or sea crossing, they would have been required to transit directly through BC without stopping OR be quarantined 14 days.
I am searching my mind and I don't think I've seen a trawler that big before. Lots of commercial vessels in my area but definitely nothing that big. That's something I'd expect to see off the coast of Alaska.
Six; four overnight. Denied access at two other locations.Do you know she spent time at marinas?
There is no 15 day quarantine in the AK Mandate.15 days quarantine prior to flight, test, if the do not flunk the test, then get on the plane.
Bruce; can you explain that; is it a "summer" issue or trade restrictions?The loading delay means the ship misses the last export date before summer in the Middle East, so no loading no exporting.
I agree 100%. We are starting to see, what was good non-partisan co-operation, cracking and politics creaping in. Pity, but it had to come sometime.There are enough locally without importing more. If that means quarantine, just do it, it works.
A summer issue. Live animal export, sheep or beef, is a troubled trade. Due to high summer temperatures, sheep were dying, effectively pre cooked internally, en route. Ships developed a great shark following. If they survive the voyage they get slaughtered on arrival, often in someone`s backyard or a nasty foreign abattoir.Bruce; can you explain that; is it a "summer" issue or trade restrictions?