#23.How Baltic Mooring of Ship is Done?
What happens when there is a strong onshore wind and you have to berth
a ship without the assistance of tugs to a pier or jetty that is not strong
enough to bear the impact or is not sufficiently ‘fendered’?
In such a situations, the master or the pilot takes the recourse of using the
ship’s anchor as well as the wires available on board in a specific way to
minimize the impact of the fall. This is done by mooring ship in such a way
where a vessel is berthed alongside the quay by employing a stern mooring
shackled to the offshore anchor cable in the region of the ‘ganger length’.
When approaching the berth, the offshore anchor is deployed and the
weight on the cable and the stern mooring act in unison to hold the vessel
just off the quay.
Baltic mooring is a combination mooring of a vessel alongside the berth
which employs a stern mooring shackled to the offshore anchor cable in the
region of the “ganger length”. When approaching the berth, the offshore
anchor is deployed and the weight on the cable and the stern mooring act
to hold the vessel just of the quay. Baltic mooring is a safe option to berth a
ship on a windy day.
Now, there is a preparatory
process to be undertaken before venturing for the Baltic moor.
– At first a 30 mm wire is
passed from the poop deck on the offshore side from the outside of the hull and
clear of any protrusions like the gangway, the pilot ladder etc.
– The anchor is cock billed,
i.e., released a little from the hawse pipe before finally letting it go, and a
man is lowered with a bosun’s chair (a seat suspended from the ship to perform
any work outside the ship’s hull) to tie up the wire to the anchor with a
shackle at about the ganger’s length.
– The other end of the wire is
taken ‘on turn’ upon a mooring winch through a bight.
– When the ship is abreast of
the berth and falling on it rapidly, the anchor is dropped keeping trickle
headway so that the anchor holds.
– When the anchor is snubbed,
the wire from the stern that goes in with the anchor, gets taught and
effectively holds the fall of the stern.
– The anchor chain is then
slowly payed off and simultaneously the wire from the stern, while the on-shore
wind pushes the vessel horizontally to the berth.
– As soon as the vessel is
close -springs, head and stern lines are passed ashore with the heaving lines
and the scope of the anchor adjusted accordingly so as to bring the ship slowly
alongside the berth.
–
Normally the anchor is dropped 70-100 feet off the berth depending on the wind
force and the tonnage of the vessel.
Do you have more
information on the baltic mooring process of ships? Let us know your thoughts
in the comments below.
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