Training wheels (thrusters) are a useful tool for anyone just getting started in boating a larger vessel. Boy did I need those training wheels.
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I wonder if the skippers and pilots of tankers and container, bulk, and automobile ships consider their bow thrusters to be training wheels?
A long time ago in Hawaii we produced a series of television commercials for Matson Navigation featuring their then-brand-new roll-on, roll-off ships. The "plot" of one of the commercials followed a big farm tractor from the manufacturer in the midwest to Oakland by train, then on the ship to Hilo, and then by road to the ranch it was destined for. I was "volunteered" to shoot the scenes at sea showing the tractor on the ship enroute and other shots depicting the ocean part of the voyage.
This being a state-of-the-art ship for its day, it had a very small crew, and I was given the run of the ship during the voyage. So I spent a lot of time on the bridge and I remember being incredibly impressed when we departed first Oakland and then Honolulu for the last leg to Hilo. While there was a tug standing by, the ship's captain and the pilot didn't need it. With ships moored ahead of and behind us they powered the bow away from the pier with the bow thruster (the first one I had ever encountered) and then simply drove the 600' ship away. Way cool.
So I don't regard thrusters as training wheels at all. They enable a skipper--- be it of a 36' toy recreational boat or an 800' container ship---- to do things he otherwise couldn't do, be it dispense with the aid of a tug or slip a boat into a tight spot on the marina dock in the face of an adverse wind and/or current.
Carey, I think, has the smart approach to using a thruster. If he doesn't need it he doesn't use it. If it will make a docking or departure easier, or reduce the potential for damaging something on his boat or someone else's, he uses it.
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