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Wes Struble: Arrival and Departure, February 19, 2012

NOAA Teacher at Sea Wes Struble Aboard NOAA Ship Ronald H. Brown February 15 - March 5, 2012

Mission: Western Boundary Time Series Geographical Area: Sub-Tropical Atlantic, off the Coast of the Bahamas Date: February 19, 2012 Weather Data from the Bridge Position: 26 deg 30 min MN Latitiude & 71 deg 55 min Longitude Windspeed: 15 knots Wind Direction: South (bearing 189 deg) Air Temperature: 23.2 deg C / 74 deg F Atm Pressure: 1013.9 mb Water Depth: 17433 feet Cloud Cover: 30% Cloud Type: Cumulus Personal Log With some minor travel changes in Seattle and a redeye flight into Charleston, South Carolina I arrived at NOAA Ship Ronald H. Brown at about 10:30 am Tuesday morning - tired but grateful. We left port mid-morning the next day and headed south/southeast. On the way out of port we were treated to a dolphin escort – five or six dolphins surfed our bow wave for half an hour or more. I share a stateroom with another teacher, David Grant. My stateroom  is comfortable and I will be sleeping on the upper bunk – a somewhat tight fit and something I haven’t done since my brother and I were sharing a room while we were in junior high school. [caption id="attachment_8850" align="aligncenter" width="389" caption="The Ronald H. Brown docked at the pier before our departure"]Image may be NSFW.
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[caption id="attachment_8855" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="David Grant, my fellow teacher-at-sea, working in our stateroom"]Image may be NSFW.
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[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8857" align="aligncenter" width="493" caption="A Dolphin escort off the bow of the Ron Brown as we head out of Charleston"]Image may be NSFW.
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The Ron Brown is the largest ship in the NOAA fleet. She was commissioned in 1997 and is named in honor of Ronald H. Brown, Secretary of Commerce under the Clinton Administration who died in a plane crash on a trip to Bosnia. With a length of just under 280 feet the Ron Brown has ample deck space for hauling all the various amounts of materials and equipment needed for a research cruise.  The ship’s captain is Captain Mark Pickett, the Executive Officer is Lieutenant Commander Elizabeth Jones, the operations officer is Lieutenant James Brinkley, the medical officer is Lieutenant Christian Rathke, with Ensign Aaron Colohan, and Ensign Jesse Milton making up the remaining officers. The entire ship’s complement is divided up between the NOAA Corps crew members, the merchant marines, and the science staff. For this trip we have approximately 50 people on board including the crew and the scientists.  From the science group there are four of us that will be dividing up the CTD watch: David Grant, Shane Elipot, Aurélie Duchez, and myself. As I mentioned earlier, David Grant is my Teacher at Sea colleague for this cruise. He hails from Sandy Hook, New Jersey which is considered the most northern sandy beach in the state. David teaches a variety of science courses at a community college. Shane & Aurélie are from France (although they both currently work in the UK for the Natural Environment Research Council). [caption id="attachment_8858" align="aligncenter" width="508" caption="A Coast Guard Ship shared the pier with the Ron Brown"]Image may be NSFW.
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[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8859" align="aligncenter" width="438" caption="The Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge over the Cooper River, Charleston SC - a fine example of a graceful Cable Stay Bridge"]Image may be NSFW.
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[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8861" align="aligncenter" width="542" caption="A view of the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge from below as the Ron Brown passes under the bridge"]Image may be NSFW.
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[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8862" align="aligncenter" width="481" caption="A view of Fort Sumter - one of the icons of the War between the States"]Image may be NSFW.
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[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8864" align="aligncenter" width="434" caption="A mass of sargassum (floating seaweed) - from which we derive the name of this part of the Atlantic Ocean - the Sargasso Sea"]Image may be NSFW.
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[/caption] After the Brown got underway we had the first of many drills. All of the science crew met in the main lab where one of the NOAA Corps officers, ENS Jesse Milton, reviewed the proper use of the rescue breathing apparatus, the Gumby suit, and the PFD (personal flotation device). When the meeting was over we had three practice drills: Fire/Emergency, Abandon ship, and Man Overboard. Each of these emergency situations has their own alarm bell pattern and all those aboard have particular responsibilities and particular muster stations to which they are to report. A Fire/Emergency is identified by a long (10 seconds or more) continuous alarm bell. When the bell sounds everyone is to move to their assigned stations. The science crew is to go to the main lab and await instructions. If the main lab is actually where the fire or emergency is located our second muster point is the mess. A series of short blasts (at least 6) followed by a long continuous blast indicates Abandon ship. When this alarm sounds you are to drop whatever you are doing return to your stateroom and retrieve your PFD and Gumby suit and report to your muster station. In addition to the life saving articles, you should be wearing long pants, a long sleeve shirt, and a hat (to protect you from exposure while drifting at sea in the life boat). For this emergency situation I am to report to fire station 15 with a number of other members of the crew and be ready to load into a lifeboat. Three long alarm bells announce a man overboard. During this emergency different groups of people are assigned different positions around the ship to look for and point to the person who has gone overboard. When the floating person is spotted, all those on deck are to indicate the overboard person’s position by pointing with their outstretched arm. A person floating in the water produces a very low profile and can be very difficult to see from a small boat bouncing in the waves. If the rescue team has trouble locating the floating person they can look up at the ship and see where all the spotters are pointing. This can direct them toward the overboard person’s location.

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