

IT IS WITH regret and haste that I write this letter
to you, regret, that such a small misunderstanding could lead to the following
circumstances, and haste, in order that you will get this report before you
form your own preconceived opinions from reports In the world press for I am
sure that they will tend to over dramatise the affair.
We
had just picked up the pilot and the apprentice had returned from changing the
‘G’ flag for the ‘H’ and, it being his first trip, was having difficulty in
rolling the ‘G’ flag up. I therefore proceeded to show him how. Coming to the
last part, I told him to ‘let go’. The lad, although willing, is not too
bright, necessitating my having to repeat the order in a sharper tone.
At
this moment the Chief Officer appeared from the Chart room, having been
plotting the vessel’s progress, and thinking that it was the anchors that were
being referred to, repeated the ‘let go’ to the Third Officer on the
forecastle. The port anchor, having been cleared away but not walked out, was promptly let go. The effect of letting the anchor drop
from the ‘pipe’ while the vessel was proceeding at full harbour speed proved
too much for the windlass brake and the entire length of the port cable was
pulled out ‘by the roots’. I fear that the damage to the chain locker may be
extensive. The braking effect of the port anchor naturally caused the vessel to
sheer in that direction, right towards the swing bridge that spans a tributary
to the river up which we were proceeding.
The
swing bridge operator showed great presence of mind by opening the bridge for
my vessel. Unfortunately, he did not think to stop the vehicular traffic, the
result being that the bridge partly opened and deposited a Volkswagen, two
cyclists and a cattle truck on the foredeck. My ship’s company are at present
rounding up the contents of the latter, which from the noise I would say were
pigs. In his efforts to stop the progress of the vessel, the Third Officer
dropped the starboard anchor, too late to be of any practical use, for it fell
on the swing bridge operator’s control cabin.
After
the port anchor was let go and the vessel started to sheer, I gave a double
ring Full Astern on the Engine Room Telegraph and personally rang the Engine
Room to order maximum astern revolutions. I was informed that the sea
temperature was 53º and asked if there was a film
tonight; my reply would not add constructively to this report.
Up
to now I have confined my report to the activities at
the forward end of the vessel. Down aft they were having their own problems. At the moment the port anchor was let go, the Second Officer
was supervising the making fast of the after tug and was lowering the ship’s
towing spring down onto the tug. The sudden braking effect on the port anchor
caused the tug to ‘run in’ Under the stern of my
vessel, just at the moment when the propeller was answering my double ring Full
Astern. The prompt action of the Second Officer in securing the inboard end of
the towing spring delayed the sinking of the tug by some minutes, thereby
allowing the safe abandoning of that vessel.
It
is strange, but at the very same moment of letting go
the port anchor there was a power cut ashore. The fact that we were passing
over a ‘cable area’ at that time might suggest that we may have touched something
on the river bed. It is perhaps lucky that the
high-tension cables brought down by the foremast were not live, possibly being replaced by the underwater cable, but owing to the
shore blackout it is impossible to say where the pylon fell. It never fails to
amaze me, the actions and behaviour of foreigners
during moments of minor crisis. The pilot, for instance, Is at this moment
huddled in the corner of my day cabin, alternately crooning to himself and
crying after having consumed a bottle of gin in a time that is worthy of
inclusion in the Guinness Book of.
The
tug captain, on the other hand, reacted violently and had to be
forcibly restrained by the Steward, who has him handcuffed in the ship’s
hospital, where he is telling me to do impossible things with my ship and my
person.
I
enclose the names and addresses of the drivers and insurance companies of the
vehicles on my foredeck, which the Third Officer collected after his somewhat
hurried evacuation of the forecastle. These particulars will enable you to
claim for the damage that they did to the railings of the No. 1 hold.
I
am enclosing this preliminary report, for I am finding it difficult to
concentrate with the sound of police sirens and their flashing lights.
It
is sad to think that, had the apprentice realised that there is no need to fly
pilot flags after dark, none of this would have happened.
For my weekly Accountability Report I will assign the following Casualty
Numbers T/750101 to T/750199 inclusive.
Yours truly
Master