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The process of preparing PRIDE OF BALTIMORE II for spending seven months
away from home and her home waters has always been a detailed exercise. This
year it seems to have become more involved than usual. I attribute this to the
combination of spar and mast repairs, re-engineering in the engine room, changes
in staff and my partner captain. Five years have also passed since PRIDE II has
been on a voyage out of North America.
In terms of the staff and my partner Captain Beebe-Center,
none were working with Pride of Baltimore, Inc. back in 2000 when PRIDE II raced
over to Europe. While new staff do not by themselves represent a problem
preparing a mission to Europe, collectively they represent a lot of discussion
and review of old records on how past off-continent voyages have been conducted.
Having these discussions at the same time as the ship is being prepared is,
frankly, quite distracting however important and helpful they may be to
efficiently prepare of such a mission as we have planned for this year.


The engine room re-engineering has been very successful for achieving the
intended goals. However, it has also required an inordinate amount of
ãretrainingä time on how it is meant to be used and what its actual performance
means.
The spar and mast repairs combined to slow down the timing
for getting the rig completely assembled. This meant an unusually long period
was spent by the crew on rig details that might otherwise have been spent
elsewhere.
Altogether, it has meant there has been an overarching
feeling of being barely in control of the time available to get the vessel ready
for her mission. Even so, PRIDE II was ready for her Coast Guard Inspection and
passed it routinely - although there was a scare due to an incorrectly completed
form filled out by our fire fighting equipment service provider. Fortunately,
that was correctible on short notice and so there was actually no reason for the
Coast Guard to prevent PRIDE II from commencing her mission.
All
of this demonstrates just how important the role of "supplier of services" is to
vessels in general. In the case of PRIDE II, there are many providers that give
to her freely as well as those that give at a significant discount.
For years Bob Campbell of Marine Electrical Systems has
been our advisor on all things corrosion. This time we went to him in the matter
of revamping the 24 Volt DC charging, storing, and inverting system to a 120
Volt AC system. He provided uncountable hours of planning pro bono as well all
hardware at his cost for significant savings in an endeavor such as this.
For two decades, Electronic Marine Services has been
providing at cost all of our electronic navigational aids. This year Phil
Mitchell, the owner, will again assist us with a new GPS that will bring the
ship up to the regulatory minimums for maritime security. He will also be
helping with installing special gear that will track wind direction and
strength, vessel position, vessel speed and direction, as well angle of heel.
The accumulated data will be used to correlate vessel design to dynamic
performance in a project meant to re-examine what may become in the future
valuable information contained within stability letters provided by naval
architects in general and required by the Coast Guard on all passenger certified
vessels. Phil will also be our source of electronic charting in coordination
with Matt Taylor of Nobeltec Marine electronic charting.
Doug Howard of Arrow Metal Fabricators has been a great
supporter of the ship since she was first built. He has almost always provided
his assistance freely. This last winter he helped with many details needed in
the engine room as well with the spar repairs.
MITAGS (Marine Institute of Training and Graduate Studies)
has also for years been a supporter of PRIDE II through pro-bono training of key
personnel and did so again earlier this year for two of our crew.
Gary ãLeroyä Surosky, owner of Peregrine Construction,
has, since he was the foreman of construction of PRIDE II, been a constant
friend to her. He continues to provide wood related assistance at cost as well
as donations of services and material.
USS CONSTELLATION has also been helpful this year with
shop access and delivery destination since PRIDE II lost her old ãshipping
addressä when she had to move to another part of the harbor for winter storage.
There are, of course, numerous vendors that provide PRIDE
II with needed equipment and services. But I thought I would share with you some
of those that have been real friends as well as suppliers.
As I sit at home writing this, PRIDE II is in Chestertown
- her second official port stop of this year. Next week, she will be back in
Baltimore with Captain John Beebe-Center in command. It will be the last time
PRIDE II will be in her home port till early December. So this will be the last
chance to get aboard all those myriad of things we will come to miss if we do
not get them aboard now. In a weeks time, I go aboard and head off for Europe
with the crew and several Guest Crew aboard for the ãchance of a lifetimeä to
sail across the North Atlantic aboard a Baltimore Privateer.
Cheers,
Captain Miles
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