A couple of years ago as we were heading westbound towards the gate (on our way back from Maine to Albany) we listened in on a Beneteau arguing with a tug and barge that they had the right of way because they were constrained by draft lol. They got really angry at the tug on 16 until the NYPD stepped in, did the standard reminder of what 16 is for (first time I've heard the NYPD do that vs the coasties), and then told the Beneteau that they would pull them over for smoking crack if they actually thought they had stand on over the tug. My wife and I were laughing so hard listening to the whole exchange.
the rules i my country say that comercial ships are always the stand on, but they word it like big over small. after the comercial boats and ships come the sailboats unless the powered boat is fishing or other wize limited in their steering.
Don’t hold back. Educate the masses with your real world working experience. It’s the only way people learn, from those that do 24/7. Thanks for the great entertaining videos!
Thanks for the wonderful ride through Hell Gate. I have great deal of respect for tugboat captains! When I was a kid sixty years ago, my parents owned a 38 foot Elco (built in Bayonne NJ in 1929) and kept it near Albany on the Hudson. One summer we traveled up the Hudson to Lake Champlain but we got a late start northward. As night fell, we left the lock at Stillwater NY and got behind a tugboat pushing a barge (jet fuel for Plattsburgh or Burlington). We didn't want to pass him because of the dimly lit buoys (kerosene lanterns) that marked the narrow and twisty channel (and swimmers would frequently extinguish them ) in the Hudson River. So we followed a slow tug who was running search lights on both sides of the barge to find the buoys. When we got to Schuylerville and 2 hours later, the tug captain kindly illuminated the tricky entrance to the harbor for us. Thank you Mr. Tugboat Captain for the illumination. And thank you Capt. Tim for the continued illumination about important maritime issues!
I graduated from Kings Point and sailed deep sea for a while as a deck officer before I started to work ashore. (Wanted to stay married.) The yacht comment cracked me up. Nice channel and enjoyed the transit.
When I was in grade 8 I remember filling out an aptitude test. It recommended I become a tugboat captain! Strong maths and reasoning skills. Well I found myself on a different path and became a refrigeration mechanic. My eldest brother became a civil engineer and when I was younger detested engineers. Rules this and rules that, however I learned to respect his profession the day I recognized that engineering is really about risk management. He strove to provide our society with the methods to ensure safety. But he was certainly amazed by my methodology in incorporating good engineering theory into practical application. You do a great job at what you do. The world has as many critics as mosquitoes it seems. And you are a professional so you must have an academic streak in you!
Thank you very much for watching Kevin. You made me giggle remembering my highschool aptitude test recommendations... (I shouldn't out this out there. 😂) It said I should either be an airline steward (remember when they were called that?) or a hairdresser...... 😂 😂 😂 I was surprised they didn't also suggest show business... 😂 To funny. CUOTO
On basically all yt channels are a tiny group of viewers knowing everything better than the content creator doing it for years and years professionally. If you're based in the real world, this phenomenon may be hard to understand at first glance. Since the beginning of the internet age, there was always someone with a keyboard and a grudge. Those guys (mostly men) aren't looking for a topic-related fact-based discussion - they use the anonymity of the www to annoy people they wouldn't dare to in real life. Therefore - don't worry to much about those people. I think it's best to ignore them - as ignorance is what they fear the most. Enjoy sharing your line of work with 99,99% of your viewers who appreciate your effort to bring us great videos. Thanks for that!!
Hi Tim, I understand your frustration. Some people fail to understand that the maritime industry is a business. And that moving many tons of hazardous cargo is serious business. CUOTO
I honestly can share your frustrations? There will always be an expert somewhere. The rules are what makes things work most of the time, but not all the time. Rules help us predict behaviors, common sense generally keeps us alive..Fair winds captain! Thanks for sharing!
there is a tug called "W.O. Decker - South Street Seaport Museum. 1930 circa" she used to give rides. RECOMMEND IT IF YOU CAN GET A RIDE. i rode on her once. it was very interesting.
What I love best about this is you're steaming right by all the hustle of the city, you can hear the sirens and the cars and see the people, but just a few feet away, there is calm out on the water, slowly drifting by in your own world. CUOTO Tim!
Thanks for the ride Skipper! Last time I went through the gates was in the winter of 1980. I was one of the "Notorious" Puddle Pirates... on a 41' UTB. I remember, one trip through... It was one of those seasonal ebb tide changes and the waters there in Hells Gate was like boating in a washing machine! It was a fun ride on a "Toy Boat". VTS is a truly amazing Organization. They were just upstairs of my Comm Center in Houston. It's like going into a CIC night or day, it was always dark and busy. I... We....Many of us understand your "rant". Being an operator of any vessel is a Serious Responsibility. That is the issue. Sadly, there are those that that just do not exercise courtesy nor common sense. You know very well... Certification, Education, Training can not replace Experience! I don't think any one person can know, or understand everything, ever! Thank's again.
Capt. Tim B, I started with a SV Sunfish, then a Cape Cod Bullseye Sloop, and the SV Patience (5 net tons documented) Eddy and Duff Stonehorse out of Boston. Then larger sail and power on charter, sometimes second and sometimes master. Now an octogenarian, I am vicariously enjoying watching your videos of your yacht, and the working boats. Discovered your videos today and so far have binged on them. Thank you for the trip westbound through Hells Gate. I never got that far west before. Stamford, CT was as far down the Sound I ever got. I am going to pour myself a Drambouie, on a rock, and have it with a hot black cup of coffee and watch at least two more tonight! So much less work in the armchair! P.S. I always gave working boats and ships all the room I could so they didn't even have to think about me if that was where you stopped talking in this video. I think the only tight ones were in the Cape Cod Canal, passing port to port. People used to be critical of me, saying that it was silly when I signaled my intention, but the pros always answered confirming, and I gave them the center of the channel.
Tim, I am inclined to agree with you on your frustration in dealing with "yachtsmen". Very few "yachtsmen" are unaware that operating a tugboat is quite a bit different than operating a yacht. Different physical forces are at work for each. Keep up the good work!
My Dad used to say "to knowledge have and wisdom lack, is a load of books on an asses back" People being book smart without the experience to apply the knowledge is a real problem these days. Great Channel, thank you from Alberta, Canada
Good on you. We all get frustrated and say things. Having the ability to review what we said and then turn down the volume is something that we can all learn from. Hopefully you feel better that you got that rant off your chest!
Thanks for the explanation on how heading head against the tide for a barge provides improved steerage. When navigating my sailboat through Hell Gate I feel for the barge skipper when I have 5 knots in my favor. Watching your channel helps me improve my own skills.
Tim: I would like to have heard what you were going to say. I'm a relatively new boater, about 7 years, and like to hear opinions and knowledge from people who have been around and dealt with all kinds of situations. It seems like common sense and respect for the other guy are about the best rules of thumb I have found that covers nearly every sitiuation I have encountered so far on the water. Of course the rule of tonnage is a good one too! Outside of the NY sights, learning from you is the reason I will happily continue watching your videos. Keep up the good work.
Amatures that think they are professionals are a danger to themselves and others, and tend to resist learning enough to actually progress to a professional level of skills.
Here in Wisconsin if you where born after Jan 1 1989 you need to take a boater safety course but even taking that I still do not believe I could do your job as much as I would love to do a "ride along" you channel is the next best thing.
Tim your videos are great. Biggest mistake most RUclips creators make is letting comments affect them. Please don’t be affected or infected by people who have no clue of which they speak. Stay safe and keep making these great journeys.
My take on your rant is - Rant away! We learn from you every time you open your mouth and speak and while I am truly impressed by your knowledge, your restraint indicates your wisdom! Thank you for your video's and as always, I/we are in your debt for sharing your life experiences.
A great lesson in physics, as you left dock. It was interesting to watch the maneuver pulling away and rotating the barge at the same time. Looks easy, until you take into account the mass and velocity as you go, then transition easily into forward motion. Great video.
Thank you very much for watching Dennis. If you are new to the channel, Welcome. Please consider subscribing. I try to post new content every Tuesday. CUOTO
Good Morning Tim, Thank you for taking us on the ride thru the Gate. I would love to ride along again thru the Gate with YOU calling out all of the scenery. I have lived some frustration with other "boaters" while working on clam and oyster boats in the Long Island Sound. In the biker community there is a saying, "fifteen grand and fifteen miles don't make you a biker" same goes for boats of all kinds. There is a saying in the commercial fishing community, "A little knowledge is dangerous" and that goes for nearly every profession. I respect you cutting out anything that you might feel was negative, it is your channel, and you should only release what you feel is acceptable. Your videos are great, they show us things we may have never seen, they give us a view into a world that we otherwise may have never known, they give us a better understanding of what tug capts go thru, and they teach us the good, the bad, the what-to-do and what-NOT-to-do around your tow. Keep up the amazing content. Wishing you a fair wind, calm seas, and slack tide every time you need it. CUOTO.
New subscriber just came across your channel. As a sailor on a 34 foot boat out of Port Washington NY, I have a greater appreciation for your visibility and having sailed through the gate several times I’m pleasantly surprised at you’re maneuverability pulling away from that dock. appreciate you sharing this video in stories. Good rant, btw. Sometimes it has to be said.
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel. Please consider subscribing. I trying to post new content every Tuesday. You may also like my other channel, SV Paquita. I sailed my 42 foot boat down to Puerto Rico and will soon be sailing it back up north. CUOTO
Hi Tim, your channel is much appreciated by me and by a lot of viewers, and I would like to thank you for your generosity in allowing us to share your love for what you do. I always find that "small" minds talk small, in other words, they have their rut and they are sticking to it, no matter what. I have not found a valid way to deal with this issue, but if I ignore it, it tends to lose power over time. You do such a fantastic job with these videos that it really surprises me that there are viewers that pick on them and you; that is just a sign of our times I guess, entitlement seems so pervasive. Sorry about my rant jaja! With much gratitude CUOTO
No isues here Tim. We all have stuff that we have to blow off steam about. My sense is that you're not a disrespectful person. You're just telling your story. Keep it up. I learn from each video you share with us.
I respect your cutting the rant. I have written many a email at work that I wisely and thankfully deleted before sending. Thanks for another great video. CUOTO.
It's all good; don't sweat the abridged rant. Your channel, say what you want. Love hearing you talk and love hearing the engine and seeing the sites. It's all good for me.
I love your confidence but also respect for the machinery and the forces of nature. You make this look so easy, im still getting very stressed maneuvering a 50 footer
As someone who's water life only extends to my 17ft walleye boat I will say I always feel its my responsibility to stay completely out of the way of any working vessel and try to figure out what they want and need me to do. Not what I want them to do. Us pleasure boat users need to better understand what our actions on the water should be. I have been in some crazy situations chasing fish but always listen and take advice of the true real captains to stay safe.. Love your videos and find them very relaxing and interesting. Glad you put the time and energy into this channel for all of us to enjoy. We will try to stay clear of you bow sir haha.
Fantastic video and channel. I spent over 20 years in the Navy and retired O-7 but all my career was in public affairs. Greatest respect for men like you who can actually do things on the water.
@@TimBatSea I sailed a desk with CINCPAC at Pearl for most of my career. It’s the seamen, petty officers and master chiefs who run the Navy, we officers are glorified managers. I always made sure that the seamen and noncoms got the credit they deserved in press releases, community relation events, etc.
Tim listening to the engine sounds reminds me of my stint with All Alaskan Seafoods as a welders helper and processor I stood fire watch from Tacoma WA to the fishing grounds in Alaska at least ten days then I was all over that ship for 4 months before I got to go home (an old Liberty ship converted into a fish processor 300 ft long 90ft wide 5decks to the superstructure and 290 people on board from February 1987 to March 1994.
My new favorite channel. Spent 15 years in NY watching you guys do your work with fascination. Wish I had your channel then but great to learn your side now. SHould be required watch for all aspiring tug captains. Kudos. Big fan.
Tim I understand the frustration. I know the difficulty in balancing your words when it may offend a few. I am not as subtle. For those so sensitive and so enamored with their alleged knowledge of maritime, I have a finger and it is the middle one. I have extensive experience in San Francisco Bay and later in inland navigation. In both commercial traffic was a fact of life. In SF, the club sneered with their interpretation of the rules of the road. Folks, reading Chapmans does not prepare you for reality. The real rule is channels, physics, and gross tonnage, I was later part of a sailing club on the Tennessee River that understood. We routed all of our events away from the channel avoiding commercial traffic. We also pounded home the reality of right of way beyond the BS most boaters believe. In all of the regatta briefings we were reminded to stand down when a towboat was coming. To never believe you can beat them across the channel, and to never start out directly behind until a few minutes passed after their passing. Doing so once made me understand all I needed to know about aircraft wake turbulence which is no different in boating. Boating is a great experience and recreational boaters need to grasp their limits when their mortality is involved..
I agree entirely. I was heading up Resurrection Bay on a 165' crabber, all four tanks pressed up with a 300 tons of herring and some wanker in a sailboat suddenly decided to cut right across my bow while I was making 12 knots. Got so close that all I could see was the top of his mast with both mains backing hard. I ran out onto the wing to see if we'd hit them, and the guy had the audacity to holler up "I've got the right-of-way, asshole". I replied "Physics don't give a damn about your right-of-way!". That kind of thing still wakes me up at night.
The thing is that "right of way" isn't even a thing in the COLREGS. They don't say "you can do whatever you want and other people have to lump it" - it's stand on and give way, which means basically "you keep doing what you are doing in a consistent and predictable manner" and "you alter course to avoid that vessel who is behaving in a consistent and predictable manner so you can figure out how to avoid them." It's literally just specifying that only one vessel should be making a significant course correction to avoid vessels both trying to change course and turning into each other. Like you know the little dance people end up doing sometimes when they meet in a doorway or something? "You go" "No you go" etc? It's to avoid the boat version of that. (Only since people stop better than boats do, the boat version usually leads to someone sinking.) It does not absolve either vessel of responsibility for a collision, either, because if you get close and the give way vessel has not given way, it is the job of the stand on vessel to adjust course AT THAT POINT to avoid hitting the other vessel. So they can't just go merrily along and expect everyone to just get out of their way, as some recreational boaters like to do. The COLREGs literally don't say to do that.
Capt. Tim: Another great video. Thank you for letting us ride along with you. Saturday morning coffee with Capt. Tim, what a great way to start the day. One of the reasons I started teaching sailing/boating is that I recognized the need for education of the boating public. Teaching for Tradewinds Sailing School on SFO Bay I tough the required class objectives but included how the commercial marine industry works and how best to not get in their way. Even if we might have the rules on our side they should consider the hazards to all in pushing their "rights". At the end of class they fully understood how VTS works and how to communicate on Ch. 13 with commercial traffic. They got a good dose on using maritime language such as "I intend on hugging the red side." Your videos are a great source of education to the boating public and at least one video will be played in the classroom portion of our classes with your web link passed along to them. Thank you... capt bill
That's great Bill! Thank you very much! Without trying to get to cranky, I would like to point out how so many other countries have educational requirements for anyone wanting to buy a boat. It sounds like you are teaching some of the things I wish more people knew. CUOTO
@@TimBatSea Some states now require a boating class starting with the young and working up. This is ludicrous . Make it mandatory for ALL boaters to get licensed. Through a volunteer organization I've tough some of these boater licensing classes and people are basically given the answers for the license test. Or they can go online and take the test with an open book. There is minimal learning that takes place here. In addition to my Master's License I hold a Commercial pilot's license and as you know a person has to learn the subject to pass the test. Why not boating? I just want boaters to be safe and have a good understanding of the maritime environment and thus have more fun on the water.
Dead right poem. Here lies the body of George O'Day. He died maintaining his right of way. He was right, dead right as he rode along, But he is just as dead as if he were wrong.
Two things I suspect may be behind your silent frustration: - When you're taught a marine skill, you learn ONE way that should always work. Keeps the teaching simple, makes exams easy to set, starts you off on the right track. Over time, in particular places and circumstances, people evolve to use different ways - because for them they're right. With experience and understanding of why the 'one way' was chosen, you realise other ways are sometimes both safe and better. We have the same in scuba diving - I teach the 'one way', but sometimes in some places we'll agreed to use a different method - Big vessels have so much inertia and 'sail area' that handling them is quite different - you're thinking a minute or two ahead for how your barge need to be moving - even using full engine power. Leisure vessels are much more nimble - and we don't always realise PS - love the 'ghost ship' on your starboard at 29:18 🙂
Hey Tim , your channel , your soap-box Buddy . Power boaters never see eye-to-eye with keel boaters . Love your videos and attitude . Keep it on the one and never mind what the others say . You're doing just fine . Take it from an old Retired mariner ☮
I agree with your sentiments expressed. I'm a retired Naval Officer and all my working life was around ships from patrol boats to destroyers to tankers and aircraft carriers. Ship handling is something I'm fond of and proud of and, I used to delight in doing stern board alongside balancing the wind, tide, two engines and SOMETIMES the rudder. I think its like dancing ie you either got the rythm or you ain't? Ship handling is something you sense as one balances the momentum of the vessel and the forces acting upon it. Cheers
"... before things go Terribly wrong..." I'm not sure you stopped quite soon enough for some people... lol Great scenery and it's really cool to hear your perspective on the whole operation, from the basic mechanics of how to get the boat and barge to move how you need it to in a situation, all the way up to the politics and business of the water.
Don't know anything about being a captain but you make it look easy thanks for the ride and education looks like the best way to see that darn town is on your tug 😅 si if I don't know much it might not mean much but awesome job
A friend of mine ended up in the spotlight with her work much like you. It was a trip to see her struggle with negative commenters or know it alls. Or people that came out of the woodwork to just bring you down. She eventually learned to just let it go. Focus on why you started this and stay in that lane. But the rants in the beginning were exactly like yours, a bit worse because she wanted to write to every person and argue their point. She knew her stuff, in her line of work I'd trust my life to her 100 percent. But everyday we'd go thru her DM's and see the trash and comments on her social media. Over time the rants decreased. Those first steps into the public eye, even if you have a passion for what you do...and you do...are tough. But you're really good at it. So keep it up!
Thank you very much Seth. I appreciate that. As I move from professional to recreational mariner, I am constantly amazed at how so many people hold their confidence so high in subjects they think they know more about than the people that are doing it or have been doing it for decades. In a time when communication has never been easier or as effortless, people seem to only want to be heard and don't even consider that there is so much more they could be listening to. CUOTO
@@TimBatSea And that's exactly what enraged her. Every once and awhile she'd take a shot across the bow at someone. But she got used to it. But yeah it's mind-blowing it really is. You can't believe it until you see it. But that's life in the public eye I guess. I'll go check for those videos as well. Im new to your channel and know ZERO about life on the water. ( ashamed because I'm from Long Island..lol) A rabbit hole session later and here I am, learning about something I never gave much thought to and being interested. Even my wife said" Oh we should have done that...been tug boat owners or something." when I mentioned your videos and she gets seasick...lol. Cheers !
I’m glad I found this channel, or more accurately, it found me. I would love to see a little google map in the corner (split-screen) showing your progress compared to the land areas you are navigating between.
Thank you for watching Horatio. Please consider subscribing. I try to post new content every Tuesday. I used to have a slit screen with the chart plotter, but it seemed to loose popularity. CUOTO
Great video Mr Tim! I’m wrapping up a career as a commercial pilot, hopefully I can make it another 5 years, but now that aviation doesn’t rule my life I find myself fascinated with other profession. Thank you for taking the time to produce your videos.
I'm a new subscriber just saw your channel. When I was in college I worked one summer on Texaco tugboats out of Bayonne, as a Relief Oiler, delivering barges up and down the Hudson and East Rivers. Back in those days we had a full time cook on board, who cooked three meals a day. I was two weeks on board and two off. A couple of weeks after the summer was over, there was a terrible accident when two tugboats and a tanker collided, killing four and sinking one tug, one of the tugs I had worked on during the summer and some of the crew I had worked with died. It was not a good way to start the year. Operating tugboats in such a crowed shipping area can be dangerous. Good luck and stay safe!
You're correct about academics, I quit school at 15 and have a job getting paid to travel round the world, I don't care what your degree is in, but on the flip side of that having a degree also shows you sat and listened to someone for 3 or 4 years and remembered it all. I cant fault that.
Surprise, you're human and somethings get under your skin. I admire you for making the decision to do your editing and continuing on. Thank you enjoyed the trip.
Tim: Please always say what's on your mind. No apologies! I boated on the Hudson, around Manhattan, through Hell Gate for 18 years, Saw plenty of crazy boating incidents, gave several tows, searched for drowning victims, etc. And every July 4 was extra insane!
Great vid. Thanks for ride. Being a yachtiee I adhere to the rule of gross tonnage, I stay out of your way. Did the trip from Mobile Bay to Knoxville TN. So many barges and tugs. Even got to tour one while they were refueling. Also saw one who had a bad day. He hit the brisge tearing a hole in one of the barges. All fun and games until your cargo explodes taking out a town or two.
Been through the gate many times,Once Backwards.Funny you mention yacht clubs , we belonged to the yacht club near my home in the SE Long Island shore.The commandant Was a 70 yr old man, would show up in his fancy admiral suit.He would get a little tipsy, then hit in my wife sitting next to me.Multiple times,I asked him to have a little courtesy, about the 3rd time he followed her towards the ladies room. I grabbed him yanked him outside and knocked his false teeth out😂😂
My friend Owned a 53' and 70' Hatterass. He had a good check book! He would always tell me what a great Captain he was. He had not taken even a Power Squadron class. I started taking boat classes and realized that he did not even know the basics. He was actually a menace on the water.
😂😂😂😂😂 Thank you very much for watching Bobby. Those that have to tell everyone they are great usually would never have been recognized for their good work. CUOTO
Shucks was looking forward to the rant. Not so much for the rant as much as it was something I could learn from. You have a balanced perspective Tim. I am a recreational boater that tries to learn as much as I can about the commercial side. Respect that you shut it down when you did...
Hey Tim. No need to apologize for the mini-rant. Your opinion is spot on. The past two years has seen an unprecedented amount of new boaters. Insurance claims are up more than 25% in 2020 and 2021. Far too many leisure boaters don't educate themselves before heading out on the water. I understand and echo your frustration..
You're lucky that the docks are so solid to push off like that. Back in the 70's and 80's those very docks were pretty soft and unstable. You had the right plan and did very well to execute it. Love your ports of call, I recognize many.
Love ya brother and u are just speaking ur mind. You do know alot about the boats industry and I was in it too but there always them few people that say and think that they are way better than you. That ferry boat that's passed you when u stopped talking at the end . They are built really colder to me in south Louisiana. I use to work on tugs myself inland and offshore tugs. But now am back working on land for my kids but now I am in a shipyard working on tugs. Safe travels and look forward to the next video.
Thanks Capt Tim. Another great video of daily life in New York harbour. I get your frustration, when your whole life is on the water everyday it's a world some people just don't get , if that makes sense ?? Safe trip 👍
I've been through the gate on a 32ft boat heading to Port Jeff from Albany. Scary to say the least. Also heard a story from a friend who's company got stuck in the gate pushing a barge. That place is no joke.
Tim ... I'm fairly new to your channel(s) ... I had watched 47 of your videos and wondered what "things had gone terribly wrong" before watching this one. I was relieved to find it was just that you thought "discretion is the better part of valor" ... a good decision befitting your demeanor and wisdom. I for one find your content excellent. Stay safe. CUOTO
Hey Tim don't hold back Speak your mind the folks of Yorkshire the namesake of New York are quite accustomed to plain speaking, loved the last ten minutes down the river at nearly dusk magic moments. I visited NYC once and had fixed feeling about the place but your opening up a whole new side of the city that's far more interesting than the tourist places cheers Tim
Back in the 1980's I was a frequent NYC visitor to work on various types of communications equipment. I met a guy with decades of experience doing installation and maintenance on just about every type of radio in the city. He told me at least 20% of the VHF/low UHF background noise in Manhattan resulted from bugging various UN delegations and corporate entities and efforts to jam the bugs. He also said the FCC unsuccessfully tried to crackdown on the unlawful emissions but they couldn't do anything about the foreign governments and the corporation stuff was here today gone tomorrow or they had enough clout in Washington to derail any actions. I don't know how true this was but I had no reason to doubt him and many reasons to appreciate his expertise. Keep up the great videos and above all STAY SAFE! 🛥️❤️😷
Very interesting thanks so much for taking us all along with you, the river certainly looks narrow we’re you passed the gravel / stone barge. The railway bridge looks fantastic just a pity now trains passed as you did. See you next Tuesday cheers Mike in the UK
Nice to see you reduce your wake for that gravel barge! As far as your rant goes I was thinking of common sense and experience that was building up in my mind, nuff said. Thanks for the ride! Best Regards, Jay
Hi Tim 👋 Great videos very interesting work you and your crew do. You come across as a great guy captain human being. If i was wanting to learn this sort of job you would be the guy i would like to train me. Keep up the great work videos wish you and your crew boat a great future mate. Watching from New Zealand originally from UK-Scotland 🏴
Tim - understand the frustration! And I agree on the huge void in training (on water) that abounds in the yachting/pleasure sector. There is simply no equivalency to on-the-water EXPERIENCE! Classroom courses are ok for just general knowledge, but that's it. Knowledge is good - but wisdom comes with time. Stay safe!
A couple of years ago as we were heading westbound towards the gate (on our way back from Maine to Albany) we listened in on a Beneteau arguing with a tug and barge that they had the right of way because they were constrained by draft lol. They got really angry at the tug on 16 until the NYPD stepped in, did the standard reminder of what 16 is for (first time I've heard the NYPD do that vs the coasties), and then told the Beneteau that they would pull them over for smoking crack if they actually thought they had stand on over the tug. My wife and I were laughing so hard listening to the whole exchange.
the rules i my country say that comercial ships are always the stand on, but they word it like big over small. after the comercial boats and ships come the sailboats unless the powered boat is fishing or other wize limited in their steering.
😂😂😂😂 Thank you very much for watching Chris. That may have been me they were arguing with. 😂 CUOTO
Thank you for watching Highkicker. CUOTO
M
Such a flow of life metaphor wisdom negotiating with Ma Nature. Massive respect!
Thank you very much. Your kind words are very much appreciated. CUOTO
Don’t hold back. Educate the masses with your real world working experience. It’s the only way people learn, from those that do 24/7. Thanks for the great entertaining videos!
Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
Thanks for the wonderful ride through Hell Gate. I have great deal of respect for tugboat captains! When I was a kid sixty years ago, my parents owned a 38 foot Elco (built in Bayonne NJ in 1929) and kept it near Albany on the Hudson. One summer we traveled up the Hudson to Lake Champlain but we got a late start northward. As night fell, we left the lock at Stillwater NY and got behind a tugboat pushing a barge (jet fuel for Plattsburgh or Burlington). We didn't want to pass him because of the dimly lit buoys (kerosene lanterns) that marked the narrow and twisty channel (and swimmers would frequently extinguish them ) in the Hudson River. So we followed a slow tug who was running search lights on both sides of the barge to find the buoys. When we got to Schuylerville and 2 hours later, the tug captain kindly illuminated the tricky entrance to the harbor for us. Thank you Mr. Tugboat Captain for the illumination. And thank you Capt. Tim for the continued illumination about important maritime issues!
Thank you very much for watching Charly and sharing such a wonderful memory. CUOTO
mom used two meet dad at Stillwater lock. dad worked that run from the 50s to the 60s. was the tug in front of you red?
I graduated from Kings Point and sailed deep sea for a while as a deck officer before I started to work ashore. (Wanted to stay married.) The yacht comment cracked me up. Nice channel and enjoyed the transit.
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel Carl. CUOTO
When I was in grade 8 I remember filling out an aptitude test. It recommended I become a tugboat captain! Strong maths and reasoning skills. Well I found myself on a different path and became a refrigeration mechanic. My eldest brother became a civil engineer and when I was younger detested engineers. Rules this and rules that, however I learned to respect his profession the day I recognized that engineering is really about risk management. He strove to provide our society with the methods to ensure safety. But he was certainly amazed by my methodology in incorporating good engineering theory into practical application. You do a great job at what you do. The world has as many critics as mosquitoes it seems.
And you are a professional so you must have an academic streak in you!
Thank you very much for watching Kevin. You made me giggle remembering my highschool aptitude test recommendations... (I shouldn't out this out there. 😂) It said I should either be an airline steward (remember when they were called that?) or a hairdresser...... 😂 😂 😂 I was surprised they didn't also suggest show business... 😂 To funny. CUOTO
Tim, Ignore the .01% - you be you!! And a big THANK YOU for taking the time to share your day/nights with your videos.
Thank you very much for John. I appreciate that. CUOTO
On basically all yt channels are a tiny group of viewers knowing everything better than the content creator doing it for years and years professionally.
If you're based in the real world, this phenomenon may be hard to understand at first glance.
Since the beginning of the internet age, there was always someone with a keyboard and a grudge.
Those guys (mostly men) aren't looking for a topic-related fact-based discussion - they use the anonymity of the www to annoy people they wouldn't dare to in real life.
Therefore - don't worry to much about those people. I think it's best to ignore them - as ignorance is what they fear the most.
Enjoy sharing your line of work with 99,99% of your viewers who appreciate your effort to bring us great videos. Thanks for that!!
@@stanislavczebinski994 Thank you very much. I really appreciate that. CUOTO
@@TimBatSeaYou're welcome, mate.
Always glad I can help.
Hi Tim, I understand your frustration. Some people fail to understand that the maritime industry is a business. And that moving many tons of hazardous cargo is serious business.
CUOTO
Thank you very much for watching and supporting the channel Bill. It does get frustrating at times. CUOTO
I honestly can share your frustrations? There will always be an expert somewhere. The rules are what makes things work most of the time, but not all the time. Rules help us predict behaviors, common sense generally keeps us alive..Fair winds captain! Thanks for sharing!
Been boating for over 40 years and I have always had huge respect for tug boat captains. Would love to ride along with one someday.
Thank you for watching Charles. CUOTO
there is a tug called "W.O. Decker - South Street Seaport Museum. 1930 circa" she used to give rides. RECOMMEND IT IF YOU CAN GET A RIDE. i rode on her once. it was very interesting.
Love the history lessons and just general info on the industry as you pass them. Appreciate your work.
Thank you for watching George. CUOTO
These NYC trips never get old! Thanks and be safe!
Thank you for watching. CUOTO
What I love best about this is you're steaming right by all the hustle of the city, you can hear the sirens and the cars and see the people, but just a few feet away, there is calm out on the water, slowly drifting by in your own world. CUOTO Tim!
Beautiful Casey! I love that. Thank you for watching. CUOTO
Thanks for the ride Skipper! Last time I went through the gates was in the winter of 1980. I was one of the "Notorious" Puddle Pirates... on a 41' UTB.
I remember, one trip through... It was one of those seasonal ebb tide changes and the waters there in Hells Gate was like boating in a washing machine!
It was a fun ride on a "Toy Boat".
VTS is a truly amazing Organization. They were just upstairs of my Comm Center in Houston. It's like going into a CIC night or day, it was always dark and busy.
I... We....Many of us understand your "rant".
Being an operator of any vessel is a Serious Responsibility.
That is the issue.
Sadly, there are those that that just do not exercise courtesy nor common sense.
You know very well... Certification, Education, Training can not replace Experience!
I don't think any one person can know, or understand everything, ever!
Thank's again.
Thank you for watching Rodney. CUOTO
Capt. Tim B, I started with a SV Sunfish, then a Cape Cod Bullseye Sloop, and the SV Patience (5 net tons documented) Eddy and Duff Stonehorse out of Boston. Then larger sail and power on charter, sometimes second and sometimes master. Now an octogenarian, I am vicariously enjoying watching your videos of your yacht, and the working boats. Discovered your videos today and so far have binged on them. Thank you for the trip westbound through Hells Gate. I never got that far west before. Stamford, CT was as far down the Sound I ever got. I am going to pour myself a Drambouie, on a rock, and have it with a hot black cup of coffee and watch at least two more tonight! So much less work in the armchair! P.S. I always gave working boats and ships all the room I could so they didn't even have to think about me if that was where you stopped talking in this video. I think the only tight ones were in the Cape Cod Canal, passing port to port. People used to be critical of me, saying that it was silly when I signaled my intention, but the pros always answered confirming, and I gave them the center of the channel.
Thank you for watching both channels Eric! Welcome aboard! Glad to have you watching. CUOTO
Tim, I am inclined to agree with you on your frustration in dealing with "yachtsmen". Very few "yachtsmen" are unaware that operating a tugboat is quite a bit different than operating a yacht. Different physical forces are at work for each. Keep up the good work!
Thank you for watching John. 👍👍 CUOTO
My Dad used to say "to knowledge have and wisdom lack, is a load of books on an asses back" People being book smart without the experience to apply the knowledge is a real problem these days. Great Channel, thank you from Alberta, Canada
That's a new one for me. I really like it! Thank you for watching. CUOTO
Good on you. We all get frustrated and say things. Having the ability to review what we said and then turn down the volume is something that we can all learn from. Hopefully you feel better that you got that rant off your chest!
Yes sir. Thank you for watching Michael. CUOTO
Thanks for the explanation on how heading head against the tide for a barge provides improved steerage. When navigating my sailboat through Hell Gate I feel for the barge skipper when I have 5 knots in my favor. Watching your channel helps me improve my own skills.
That's great Paul. Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
Tim: I would like to have heard what you were going to say. I'm a relatively new boater, about 7 years, and like to hear opinions and knowledge from people who have been around and dealt with all kinds of situations. It seems like common sense and respect for the other guy are about the best rules of thumb I have found that covers nearly every sitiuation I have encountered so far on the water. Of course the rule of tonnage is a good one too! Outside of the NY sights, learning from you is the reason I will happily continue watching your videos. Keep up the good work.
Thank you for watching Earnest. That makes me very proud. CUOTO
Amatures that think they are professionals are a danger to themselves and others, and tend to resist learning enough to actually progress to a professional level of skills.
@@mmi16 agreed. Very true
Here in Wisconsin if you where born after Jan 1 1989 you need to take a boater safety course but even taking that I still do not believe I could do your job as much as I would love to do a "ride along" you channel is the next best thing.
Thank you Joe. I didn't know about that law 8n Wisconsin. CUOTO
Really enjoyed this one.
Looking forward to seeing the same trip in a brighter time of the day.
Thanks.
Thank you very much for watching and supporting the channel! I really appreciate it. CUOTO
I’ve been leisure boating for 20 years now and it still amazes me the shear amount of water these boats push! Loved the stern view!
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel. CUOTO
This former squid remains your avid subscriber.
Always educational & enjoyable! Thanks Capt!
Thank you for watching Charles and thank you for your service. CUOTO
Tim your videos are great. Biggest mistake most RUclips creators make is letting comments affect them. Please don’t be affected or infected by people who have no clue of which they speak. Stay safe and keep making these great journeys.
Thank you for watching. CUOTO
My take on your rant is - Rant away! We learn from you every time you open your mouth and speak and while I am truly impressed by your knowledge, your restraint indicates your wisdom! Thank you for your video's and as always, I/we are in your debt for sharing your life experiences.
Thank you very much for watching. I appreciate your kind words. CUOTO
A great lesson in physics, as you left dock. It was interesting to watch the maneuver pulling away and rotating the barge at the same time. Looks easy, until you take into account the mass and velocity as you go, then transition easily into forward motion. Great video.
Thank you very much for watching Dennis. If you are new to the channel, Welcome. Please consider subscribing. I try to post new content every Tuesday. CUOTO
Good Morning Tim, Thank you for taking us on the ride thru the Gate. I would love to ride along again thru the Gate with YOU calling out all of the scenery. I have lived some frustration with other "boaters" while working on clam and oyster boats in the Long Island Sound. In the biker community there is a saying, "fifteen grand and fifteen miles don't make you a biker" same goes for boats of all kinds. There is a saying in the commercial fishing community, "A little knowledge is dangerous" and that goes for nearly every profession. I respect you cutting out anything that you might feel was negative, it is your channel, and you should only release what you feel is acceptable. Your videos are great, they show us things we may have never seen, they give us a view into a world that we otherwise may have never known, they give us a better understanding of what tug capts go thru, and they teach us the good, the bad, the what-to-do and what-NOT-to-do around your tow. Keep up the amazing content. Wishing you a fair wind, calm seas, and slack tide every time you need it. CUOTO.
Thank you very much for watching and for the kind words! CUOTO
Thank you again for sharing your trips. Cool to follow along!
Thank you for watching Roger. CUOTO
New subscriber just came across your channel. As a sailor on a 34 foot boat out of Port Washington NY, I have a greater appreciation for your visibility and having sailed through the gate several times I’m pleasantly surprised at you’re maneuverability pulling away from that dock. appreciate you sharing this video in stories. Good rant, btw. Sometimes it has to be said.
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel. Please consider subscribing. I trying to post new content every Tuesday. You may also like my other channel, SV Paquita. I sailed my 42 foot boat down to Puerto Rico and will soon be sailing it back up north. CUOTO
Hi Tim, your channel is much appreciated by me and by a lot of viewers, and I would like to thank you for your generosity in allowing us to share your love for what you do. I always find that "small" minds talk small, in other words, they have their rut and they are sticking to it, no matter what. I have not found a valid way to deal with this issue, but if I ignore it, it tends to lose power over time. You do such a fantastic job with these videos that it really surprises me that there are viewers that pick on them and you; that is just a sign of our times I guess, entitlement seems so pervasive. Sorry about my rant jaja! With much gratitude CUOTO
Thank you for watching and a big thank you for your kind words. They are much appreciated. CUOTO
Thanks Capt. for a cool video! Keep them coming sir!
Thank you for watching Rusty. CUOTO
No isues here Tim. We all have stuff that we have to blow off steam about. My sense is that you're not a disrespectful person. You're just telling your story. Keep it up. I learn from each video you share with us.
Thank you very much John. I appreciate that. CUOTO
I respect your cutting the rant. I have written many a email at work that I wisely and thankfully deleted before sending.
Thanks for another great video. CUOTO.
Thank you very much for watching Stephen. CUOTO
It's all good; don't sweat the abridged rant. Your channel, say what you want. Love hearing you talk and love hearing the engine and seeing the sites. It's all good for me.
Thank you very much! CUOTO
I love your confidence but also respect for the machinery and the forces of nature. You make this look so easy, im still getting very stressed maneuvering a 50 footer
Thank you for watching. CUOTO
Great stuff as usual, Tim! Carry on and thanks!
Thank you very much for watching Joe. CUOTO
As someone who's water life only extends to my 17ft walleye boat I will say I always feel its my responsibility to stay completely out of the way of any working vessel and try to figure out what they want and need me to do. Not what I want them to do. Us pleasure boat users need to better understand what our actions on the water should be. I have been in some crazy situations chasing fish but always listen and take advice of the true real captains to stay safe.. Love your videos and find them very relaxing and interesting. Glad you put the time and energy into this channel for all of us to enjoy. We will try to stay clear of you bow sir haha.
Thank you very much. I appreciate that. CUOTO
Fantastic video and channel. I spent over 20 years in the Navy and retired O-7 but all my career was in public affairs. Greatest respect for men like you who can actually do things on the water.
Thank you and welcome to the channel Marcello. Thank you for your service. CUOTO
@@TimBatSea I sailed a desk with CINCPAC at Pearl for most of my career. It’s the seamen, petty officers and master chiefs who run the Navy, we officers are glorified managers. I always made sure that the seamen and noncoms got the credit they deserved in press releases, community relation events, etc.
Tim listening to the engine sounds reminds me of my stint with All Alaskan Seafoods as a welders helper and processor I stood fire watch from Tacoma WA to the fishing grounds in Alaska at least ten days then I was all over that ship for 4 months before I got to go home (an old Liberty ship converted into a fish processor 300 ft long 90ft wide 5decks to the superstructure and 290 people on board from February 1987 to March 1994.
Thank you for watching Art. That must have really been something. CUOTO
My new favorite channel. Spent 15 years in NY watching you guys do your work with fascination. Wish I had your channel then but great to learn your side now. SHould be required watch for all aspiring tug captains. Kudos. Big fan.
Thank you very much for watching. I appreciate that. CUOTO
Tim I understand the frustration. I know the difficulty in balancing your words when it may offend a few. I am not as subtle. For those so sensitive and so enamored with their alleged knowledge of maritime, I have a finger and it is the middle one. I have extensive experience in San Francisco Bay and later in inland navigation. In both commercial traffic was a fact of life. In SF, the club sneered with their interpretation of the rules of the road. Folks, reading Chapmans does not prepare you for reality. The real rule is channels, physics, and gross tonnage, I was later part of a sailing club on the Tennessee River that understood. We routed all of our events away from the channel avoiding commercial traffic. We also pounded home the reality of right of way beyond the BS most boaters believe. In all of the regatta briefings we were reminded to stand down when a towboat was coming. To never believe you can beat them across the channel, and to never start out directly behind until a few minutes passed after their passing. Doing so once made me understand all I needed to know about aircraft wake turbulence which is no different in boating. Boating is a great experience and recreational boaters need to grasp their limits when their mortality is involved..
I agree entirely. I was heading up Resurrection Bay on a 165' crabber, all four tanks pressed up with a 300 tons of herring and some wanker in a sailboat suddenly decided to cut right across my bow while I was making 12 knots. Got so close that all I could see was the top of his mast with both mains backing hard. I ran out onto the wing to see if we'd hit them, and the guy had the audacity to holler up "I've got the right-of-way, asshole". I replied "Physics don't give a damn about your right-of-way!". That kind of thing still wakes me up at night.
Thank you very much Henry. Very well said! And spot on. Thank you. CUOTO
😂😂😂😂 Thank you very much for watching Mark. Have you seen my video, The unwritten law of tonnage? CUOTO
@@TimBatSea I will check that out. The sailboat wasn't even sailing; it was under power; flat water, no wind, check cleared. Yoiks!
The thing is that "right of way" isn't even a thing in the COLREGS. They don't say "you can do whatever you want and other people have to lump it" - it's stand on and give way, which means basically "you keep doing what you are doing in a consistent and predictable manner" and "you alter course to avoid that vessel who is behaving in a consistent and predictable manner so you can figure out how to avoid them." It's literally just specifying that only one vessel should be making a significant course correction to avoid vessels both trying to change course and turning into each other. Like you know the little dance people end up doing sometimes when they meet in a doorway or something? "You go" "No you go" etc? It's to avoid the boat version of that. (Only since people stop better than boats do, the boat version usually leads to someone sinking.)
It does not absolve either vessel of responsibility for a collision, either, because if you get close and the give way vessel has not given way, it is the job of the stand on vessel to adjust course AT THAT POINT to avoid hitting the other vessel. So they can't just go merrily along and expect everyone to just get out of their way, as some recreational boaters like to do. The COLREGs literally don't say to do that.
I’m amazed! Love watching and listening to all of your maritime stuff. Loving it Thank You Doug! You are incredible.
Thank you for watching Mariana. CUOTO
Capt. Tim: Another great video. Thank you for letting us ride along with you. Saturday morning coffee with Capt. Tim, what a great way to start the day. One of the reasons I started teaching sailing/boating is that I recognized the need for education of the boating public. Teaching for Tradewinds Sailing School on SFO Bay I tough the required class objectives but included how the commercial marine industry works and how best to not get in their way. Even if we might have the rules on our side they should consider the hazards to all in pushing their "rights". At the end of class they fully understood how VTS works and how to communicate on Ch. 13 with commercial traffic. They got a good dose on using maritime language such as "I intend on hugging the red side." Your videos are a great source of education to the boating public and at least one video will be played in the classroom portion of our classes with your web link passed along to them. Thank you... capt bill
That's great Bill! Thank you very much! Without trying to get to cranky, I would like to point out how so many other countries have educational requirements for anyone wanting to buy a boat. It sounds like you are teaching some of the things I wish more people knew. CUOTO
@@TimBatSea Some states now require a boating class starting with the young and working up. This is ludicrous . Make it mandatory for ALL boaters to get licensed. Through a volunteer organization I've tough some of these boater licensing classes and people are basically given the answers for the license test. Or they can go online and take the test with an open book. There is minimal learning that takes place here. In addition to my Master's License I hold a Commercial pilot's license and as you know a person has to learn the subject to pass the test. Why not boating? I just want boaters to be safe and have a good understanding of the maritime environment and thus have more fun on the water.
Dead right poem.
Here lies the body of George O'Day. He died maintaining his right of way. He was right, dead right as he rode along, But he is just as dead as if he were wrong.
@@masterful7574 Well said!!
Two things I suspect may be behind your silent frustration:
- When you're taught a marine skill, you learn ONE way that should always work. Keeps the teaching simple, makes exams easy to set, starts you off on the right track. Over time, in particular places and circumstances, people evolve to use different ways - because for them they're right. With experience and understanding of why the 'one way' was chosen, you realise other ways are sometimes both safe and better. We have the same in scuba diving - I teach the 'one way', but sometimes in some places we'll agreed to use a different method
- Big vessels have so much inertia and 'sail area' that handling them is quite different - you're thinking a minute or two ahead for how your barge need to be moving - even using full engine power. Leisure vessels are much more nimble - and we don't always realise
PS - love the 'ghost ship' on your starboard at 29:18 🙂
Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
Tim, I love your videos. I appreciate how you explain everything and talk to the camera all of the time. It is awesome content!
Thank you very much for the kind words. CUOTO
Thanks again for another wonderful video.
Thank you for watching Henry. CUOTO
Hey Tim , your channel , your soap-box Buddy . Power boaters never see eye-to-eye with keel boaters . Love your videos and attitude . Keep it on the one and never mind what the others say . You're doing just fine . Take it from an old Retired mariner ☮
Thank you very much Sandy! That means a lot to me. CUOTO
I agree with your sentiments expressed. I'm a retired Naval Officer and all my working life was around ships from patrol boats to destroyers to tankers and aircraft carriers. Ship handling is something I'm fond of and proud of and, I used to delight in doing stern board alongside balancing the wind, tide, two engines and SOMETIMES the rudder. I think its like dancing ie you either got the rythm or you ain't? Ship handling is something you sense as one balances the momentum of the vessel and the forces acting upon it. Cheers
Thank you for watching Joseph. CUOTO
"... before things go Terribly wrong..." I'm not sure you stopped quite soon enough for some people... lol
Great scenery and it's really cool to hear your perspective on the whole operation, from the basic mechanics of how to get the boat and barge to move how you need it to in a situation, all the way up to the politics and business of the water.
Thank you very much for watching Mathew. CUOTO
Don't know anything about being a captain but you make it look easy thanks for the ride and education looks like the best way to see that darn town is on your tug 😅 si if I don't know much it might not mean much but awesome job
Capt Tim, love the videos. Love the sound of the 3516s purring away, better than Melatonin to put me to sleep. Miss my tug boating days!
Thank you for watching Peter. If you are new to the channel, Welcome. Please consider subscribing. I try to post new content every Tuesday. CUOTO
A friend of mine ended up in the spotlight with her work much like you. It was a trip to see her struggle with negative commenters or know it alls. Or people that came out of the woodwork to just bring you down. She eventually learned to just let it go. Focus on why you started this and stay in that lane. But the rants in the beginning were exactly like yours, a bit worse because she wanted to write to every person and argue their point. She knew her stuff, in her line of work I'd trust my life to her 100 percent. But everyday we'd go thru her DM's and see the trash and comments on her social media. Over time the rants decreased. Those first steps into the public eye, even if you have a passion for what you do...and you do...are tough. But you're really good at it. So keep it up!
Thank you very much Seth. I appreciate that. As I move from professional to recreational mariner, I am constantly amazed at how so many people hold their confidence so high in subjects they think they know more about than the people that are doing it or have been doing it for decades. In a time when communication has never been easier or as effortless, people seem to only want to be heard and don't even consider that there is so much more they could be listening to. CUOTO
@@TimBatSea And that's exactly what enraged her. Every once and awhile she'd take a shot across the bow at someone. But she got used to it. But yeah it's mind-blowing it really is. You can't believe it until you see it. But that's life in the public eye I guess. I'll go check for those videos as well. Im new to your channel and know ZERO about life on the water. ( ashamed because I'm from Long Island..lol) A rabbit hole session later and here I am, learning about something I never gave much thought to and being interested. Even my wife said" Oh we should have done that...been tug boat owners or something." when I mentioned your videos and she gets seasick...lol. Cheers !
@@Prifly70 😂😂😂 Thank you very much
Well played keeping it classy! Always enjoy the videos!
Thank you for watching Kevin. CUOTO
I’m glad I found this channel, or more accurately, it found me. I would love to see a little google map in the corner (split-screen) showing your progress compared to the land areas you are navigating between.
Thank you for watching Horatio. Please consider subscribing. I try to post new content every Tuesday. I used to have a slit screen with the chart plotter, but it seemed to loose popularity. CUOTO
Thanks again Tim for a very fine video / trip.
Thank you for watching Jord. CUOTO
Thank you for watching Jord. CUOTO
Thanks Tim and don't bear yourself up. Great Videos!
Thank you very much Bob. CUOTO
No a boater here Tim so watching you operate your tug is amazing. Had no idea all that is involved in your operation. Thanks for the great videos.
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel Jack. CUOTO
Greagt video. Lots to learn about maneuvering. Thanks CUTO! :)
Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
You Are a good man I am happy to follow. Just be yourself as you are. Always looking forward to follow you on New adventures :-) 🎉
Thank you very much for watching and welcome to the channel. CUOTO
Tank you Tim B wish I could of heard all the rant. It's your channel.
Thank you for watching. I don't like to hear myself wine so it had to go. CUOTO
Great video Mr Tim! I’m wrapping up a career as a commercial pilot, hopefully I can make it another 5 years, but now that aviation doesn’t rule my life I find myself fascinated with other profession. Thank you for taking the time to produce your videos.
Thank you very much for watching Kirk. Enjoy your time. You may one day mis it. CUOTO
I'm a new subscriber just saw your channel. When I was in college I worked one summer on Texaco tugboats out of Bayonne, as a Relief Oiler, delivering barges up and down the Hudson and East Rivers. Back in those days we had a full time cook on board, who cooked three meals a day. I was two weeks on board and two off. A couple of weeks after the summer was over, there was a terrible accident when two tugboats and a tanker collided, killing four and sinking one tug, one of the tugs I had worked on during the summer and some of the crew I had worked with died. It was not a good way to start the year. Operating tugboats in such a crowed shipping area can be dangerous. Good luck and stay safe!
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel. I used to work on a boat that originally was the Texaco Fuel Chief. CUOTO
Ranting and raving, natural as.Kiaora,from Aotearoa Tim,I never imagined your city to so beautiful.
Thank you Ralph. I really appreciate that. CUOTO
You're correct about academics, I quit school at 15 and have a job getting paid to travel round the world, I don't care what your degree is in, but on the flip side of that having a degree also shows you sat and listened to someone for 3 or 4 years and remembered it all. I cant fault that.
Thank you for watching James. CUOTO
Completely sympathize with your thought process, both before and after the audio change, LOL. CUOTO.
Thank you for watching. CUOTO
Great job
Excellent love the history
Great boat
Thank you very much for watching Adam. CUOTO
Surprise, you're human and somethings get under your skin. I admire you for making the decision to do your editing and continuing on. Thank you enjoyed the trip.
Thank you very much Paul. CUOTO
A Railheads Bridge approved location. Great video reporting. Retired RR engineer w/a Able Seaman’s ticket. Bumpers.
Thank you very much for watching Chris and welcome to the channel. CUOTO
Tim: Please always say what's on your mind. No apologies! I boated on the Hudson, around Manhattan, through Hell Gate for 18 years, Saw plenty of crazy boating incidents, gave several tows, searched for drowning victims, etc. And every July 4 was extra insane!
Thank you again for watching James. CUOTO
Awesome, thanks for bringing us along. Rants and all.
Thank you for watching Denton. CUOTO
Great vid. Thanks for ride. Being a yachtiee I adhere to the rule of gross tonnage, I stay out of your way. Did the trip from Mobile Bay to Knoxville TN. So many barges and tugs. Even got to tour one while they were refueling. Also saw one who had a bad day. He hit the brisge tearing a hole in one of the barges. All fun and games until your cargo explodes taking out a town or two.
Thank you for watching. CUOTO
Another great adventure thanks . Smooth undocking, always staying safe.
Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
Been through the gate many times,Once Backwards.Funny you mention yacht clubs , we belonged to the yacht club near my home in the SE Long Island shore.The commandant Was a 70 yr old man, would show up in his fancy admiral suit.He would get a little tipsy, then hit in my wife sitting next to me.Multiple times,I asked him to have a little courtesy, about the 3rd time he followed her towards the ladies room. I grabbed him yanked him outside and knocked his false teeth out😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂 Thank you very much for watching. Always beware of someone in a costume! CUOTO
My friend Owned a 53' and 70' Hatterass. He had a good check book! He would always tell me what a great Captain he was. He had not taken even a Power Squadron class. I started taking boat classes and realized that he did not even know the basics. He was actually a menace on the water.
😂😂😂😂😂 Thank you very much for watching Bobby. Those that have to tell everyone they are great usually would never have been recognized for their good work. CUOTO
Thanks. Good Video. Watched all the way...
Thank you for watching Frank. CUOTO
I enjoyed that, thank you. Have a whole new perspective of New York; never thought of how it looks from its waterways.
Thank you for watching and welcome to the channel. Please consider subscribing if you haven't already. I try to post new content every Tuesday. CUOTO
nice views feels like a tour of the area on the water thank you tim excellent
Thank you for watching James. CUOTO
Shucks was looking forward to the rant. Not so much for the rant as much as it was something I could learn from. You have a balanced perspective Tim. I am a recreational boater that tries to learn as much as I can about the commercial side. Respect that you shut it down when you did...
Thank you for watching. Discretion can be the better part of valor. CUOTO
Hey Tim. No need to apologize for the mini-rant. Your opinion is spot on. The past two years has seen an unprecedented amount of new boaters. Insurance claims are up more than 25% in 2020 and 2021. Far too many leisure boaters don't educate themselves before heading out on the water. I understand and echo your frustration..
Thank you for watching. I appreciate your words. CUOTO
You're lucky that the docks are so solid to push off like that. Back in the 70's and 80's those very docks were pretty soft and unstable.
You had the right plan and did very well to execute it. Love your ports of call, I recognize many.
Thank you for watching David. We can't do that on every dock. CUOTO
Love ya brother and u are just speaking ur mind. You do know alot about the boats industry and I was in it too but there always them few people that say and think that they are way better than you. That ferry boat that's passed you when u stopped talking at the end . They are built really colder to me in south Louisiana. I use to work on tugs myself inland and offshore tugs. But now am back working on land for my kids but now I am in a shipyard working on tugs. Safe travels and look forward to the next video.
Thank you very much for watching Donovan. I appreciate it. CUOTO
Thanks for the tour. Grew up one block from the Hellsgate on the water.
Thank you for watching Harold. If you are new the channel, Welcome. Please consider subscribing. I try to post new content every Tuesday. CUOTO
Great video Tim. I learn something almost every one I watch. Havagudun Cap.
Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
🤙 great footage thank you
Thank you for watching George. CUOTO
Thanks Capt Tim. Another great video of daily life in New York harbour. I get your frustration, when your whole life is on the water everyday it's a world some people just don't get , if that makes sense ?? Safe trip 👍
Thank you very much for watching Jack. CUOTO
Another great video Capt. Tim. No worries about the rant. Would love to hear it in full some day.
Thank you for watching David. I'm working on it. 😂 CUOTO
I agree with your unsaid feelings. Nothing like EXPERIENCE as opposed to just book learning!
Enjoy your videos!
Thank you very much Eddie. CUOTO
I've been through the gate on a 32ft boat heading to Port Jeff from Albany. Scary to say the least. Also heard a story from a friend who's company got stuck in the gate pushing a barge. That place is no joke.
Thank you very much for watching. Yes. Very true. CUOTO
Tim ... I'm fairly new to your channel(s) ... I had watched 47 of your videos and wondered what "things had gone terribly wrong" before watching this one. I was relieved to find it was just that you thought "discretion is the better part of valor" ... a good decision befitting your demeanor and wisdom.
I for one find your content excellent. Stay safe. CUOTO
Thank you very much George! I appreciate that. What went wrong was me going off the rails on a rant that I really shouldn't be. CUOTO
Hey Tim don't hold back Speak your mind the folks of Yorkshire the namesake of New York are quite accustomed to plain speaking, loved the last ten minutes down the river at nearly dusk magic moments. I visited NYC once and had fixed feeling about the place but your opening up a whole new side of the city that's far more interesting than the tourist places cheers Tim
Thank you very much for watching Charlie. I hope you come back and see the city from the water. CUOTO
BROTHER, THIS IS A GOOD WORK.
THANK YOU.
Thank you for watching. CUOTO
Back in the 1980's I was a frequent NYC visitor to work on various types of communications equipment. I met a guy with decades of experience doing installation and maintenance on just about every type of radio in the city. He told me at least 20% of the VHF/low UHF background noise in Manhattan resulted from bugging various UN delegations and corporate entities and efforts to jam the bugs. He also said the FCC unsuccessfully tried to crackdown on the unlawful emissions but they couldn't do anything about the foreign governments and the corporation stuff was here today gone tomorrow or they had enough clout in Washington to derail any actions. I don't know how true this was but I had no reason to doubt him and many reasons to appreciate his expertise.
Keep up the great videos and above all STAY SAFE! 🛥️❤️😷
Wow! Awesome story and info George! Thank you very much for watching and sharing. CUOTO
Very interesting thanks so much for taking us all along with you, the river certainly looks narrow we’re you passed the gravel / stone barge. The railway bridge looks fantastic just a pity now trains passed as you did. See you next Tuesday cheers Mike in the UK
Thank you very much for watching Mike. CUOTO
Thank you very much for watching Mike. CUOTO
Remote cameras on the bow are vary useful if you're bridge and superstructure is aft, especially for box boats.
Thank you for watching Richard. CUOTO
Nice to see you reduce your wake for that gravel barge! As far as your rant goes I was thinking of common sense and experience that was building up in my mind, nuff said. Thanks for the ride! Best Regards, Jay
Thank you very much for watching Jay. CUOTO
Love watching the NY coast as you narrate.
Thank you for watching Peter. CUOTO
Hi Tim 👋
Great videos very interesting work you and your crew do. You come across as a great guy captain human being. If i was wanting to learn this sort of job you would be the guy i would like to train me. Keep up the great work videos wish you and your crew boat a great future mate.
Watching from New Zealand originally from UK-Scotland 🏴
Thank you very much for watching Will! And welcome to the channel. I really appreciate your kind words. CUOTO
Another great video captain Tim .
Thank you very much William. CUOTO
Tim. Your wisdom is a shining light to the rest of us.
Say no more Pal. Say no more.
Thank you very much for watching Michael. CUOTO
Tim - understand the frustration! And I agree on the huge void in training (on water) that abounds in the yachting/pleasure sector. There is simply no equivalency to on-the-water EXPERIENCE! Classroom courses are ok for just general knowledge, but that's it. Knowledge is good - but wisdom comes with time. Stay safe!
Well said Tim!! Thank you very much for watching. CUOTO
Nice!
A lot of folks don't know when to just dial it down! Good Jobbie!
Thank you very much for watching and understanding Henri. CUOTO