boomerang
Lifer
- Jun 19, 2000
- 18,883
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Remember that he said he got yelled at??Why didn't you poop over the side while you had the chance?
Remember that he said he got yelled at??Why didn't you poop over the side while you had the chance?
Remember that he said he got yelled at??
I never saw anyone piss themselves. There was some crying/whimpering at night. They got blanket parties. One guy tried to OD on Tylenol.
It only took 4 days at sea to break you? And you cried? If I ever see a male over the age of 10 crying, I will shame them into such an emotionally scared place, their tear ducts will cease to function.
The hardest part of the job was being away from home. The third and fourth day were the hardest. The captain yelled at me over the radio for doing something wrong. A few minutes later I had a small emotional breakdown. I cried a little, but regained my composure.
Is the job physically demanding? Do you plan on retiring from this job?
Could you describe a typical day for us.
How long were your shifts and how much down time per day did you get?
Sound like an adventure.
Can you sit out at night and drink a beer on deck? Or are you essentially 24/7?
OP, did you have to do any mucking out or wipe downs in the engine room? Can you still hear?
I never did any river work, so we were always making up and breaking down tows in a seaway. Not my favorite activity at night. And taking in a few hundred yards of six inch cable wasn't my favorite thing to do at any time. Were you guys always pushing, or alongside?
Aside from that shit honestly my main memory is being bored stiff. We were also on three-week rotations and by the end of week 2 I was ready to jump off the damn thing. It sucked especially on weekends when the skipper would often arrange a day or two of layup. He and most of the crew were local and would skip home, and I'd end up babysitting the boat for two days at some smelly pier behind a tank farm in the middle of nowhere. Good times.
Why did you come back?
How much "tugging" was done on said tugboat?
Pretty good bit.
Sometimes a barge would run up on a sandbar. We would asssist the grounded tug by hooking a rope to the barge with maybe 10 feet of slack. The captain would go, full reverse until the rope got tight. The jerk would almost throw you against the wall.
In SoCal at least the jobs on a tug require somebody already in the trade bringing you in.
pretty sure he was asking how much you beat off on the boat.
Long time software guy I worked with did two weekends with his brother in law on a tug and gave his notice at the software job and went full time tug. In SoCal at least the jobs on a tug require somebody already in the trade bringing you in.
Can you take one of your rescue dogs with you?
Sounds pretty cool, try to not get yourself hurt.
Can you throw a line and make a bollard or cleat...from a distance?
They are keeping my wife company while I am gone.
