Today's wordle is waiting Wordle Today's clue: Place where fish are caught Play now
#5192

Question of the Day?

Well I got that wrong. I read it as, what was the alternative to D2 standard. I knew from last time that D2 was the new standard so the alternative must have been the older water exchange D1. 🙄
Liked by Steves-s
#5189

Question of the Day?

The ballast water management question is a repeat revision one, so easy to get correct 🤗.

The Beaufort question, I had to take a "slightly educated " guess 🤔 and got the confetti again.☺☺.
Liked by AlessandroSPQR and Nickthesteam
#5188

Question of the Day?

Rear Admiral Sir Francis has breezed in😁and graced us with his presence before!

😎
Young at heart 😉 Slightly older in other places.😊 Cheers Doug
Liked by hermank and Nickthesteam and
#5187

Question of the Day?

Coincidentally, right now, and especially for tomorrow, I've been monitoring the wind situation (force in knots and direction) in the area between Ostia and Fiumicino on the Roman coast.
For us, the service is provided by the Italian Air Force, which, among other things, issues the official Meteomar bulletin every six hours and covers the entire Mediterranean.
The Beaufort scale is the same worldwide, but definitions vary. I had to consult the internet to see that the English use the term "brezza" [breeze] (with different adjectives: light, gentle, moderate, fresh, strong) from levels 1 to 6, while in Italian, the term "brezza" [breeze] is used for levels 2 and 3.
For the last degree, the twelfth, the term corresponds to "hurricane," "ouragan," or "uragano" in English, French, and Italian.
Liked by hermank and Steves-s and
#5184

Question of the Day?

Thats interesting why should everyone know the answer even not interested in sailing ?
Philuk👍
Liked by hermank and Nickthesteam and
#5182

Question of the Day?

I have posted pictures of this type of tug, nearly all South African harbour tugs use this type of propulsion.
Ed
Liked by Steves-s
#5178

Question of the Day?

Everyone knows that the Portuguese Ferdinand Magellan named the new ocean the Pacific because it seemed calm and tranquil compared to the Atlantic.
He didn't have time to change his mind. Not everyone knows that Magellan never completed the voyage around the world (which was absolutely not the mission's initial goal).
Part of his multinational crew completed it only aboard one ship, the Victoria. Besides Commander Juan Elcano (the Spaniard who eventually took command), very few men returned, including the Italian Antonio Pigafetta (a native of Vicenza in the Veneto region), who had the great merit of recounting everything in writing.
We know it all thanks to him.
Despite being taught in school, despite being shown documentaries or, lately, TV series (very well done), I am still captivated by this fascinating and incredible story.
Recently, I enjoyed one of the best historical reconstructions of the entire expedition I've ever seen or heard, on YouTube.
The authors and the presenter of the channel, in addition to the notions and the story, which I already knew, were so good at making me identify with the anxieties, indecision, and suffering of the crew who had to face storms, calms, hunger, thirst, battles with various natives, but above all scurvy (a vitamin C deficiency disease completely unknown at the time).
Liked by hermank and chugalone100 and
#5173

Question of the Day?

Really 1520 talk about antcient history
Philuk👍
Liked by hermank
#5172

Question of the Day?

Once again answer with longest answer is the right one 😂
Philuk👍
Liked by hermank and Steves-s and
#5171

Question of the Day?

Hi Steve, I agree with you; studying new topics is always a good thing (perhaps stimulated by something like an exam or a simple quiz without consequences).
However, today, it was enough to reason and use the logic and common sense of a good father.
Many rules follow a natural rationale that's easy to understand, accept, and agree with.
Other rules are highly technical or conventional and simply need to be memorized.
Today, the other three answers would have been rules that weren't in line with SOLAS's objectives.
Well done, Steve.
Liked by hermank and chugalone100 and
#5169

Question of the Day?

Hi, Phil, I remember this one from quite a while ago, but I always read the answers many times and gradually eliminate the ones that seems to be unlikely 😊.
So today we are back to the SOLAS regulations again which I found quite easy after downloading and studying the manual months ago😀.
Liked by SimpleSailor and AlessandroSPQR
#5168

Question of the Day?

The answer was the only one to mention surf like they alway say answrr is in the question thats why i read it twice and not jump in
Philuk👍
Liked by Steves-s and RossM
#5167

Question of the Day?

Lew, reading with a wide range of interests goes a long way. Life experiences help as well. Anyone who has surfed should know the answer today
Ed
Liked by Steves-s and SimpleSailor
#5166

Question of the Day?

I am amazed at the nautical knowledge of the people that answer these questions. Their internet skills are outstanding.
Lew
Lew
Florida, USA
Home page: https://www.RCFlorida.org/lmb
#5165

Question of the Day?

I remembered this one as I thought the answer should have been "The Beach Boys" 😁. It also looks like I missed yesterdays question. How I do not know..🤔
Liked by Steves-s and roycv
#5163

Question of the Day?

Good lord! I have reached the lofty height of numero uno for the first time ever with a lucky guess! It will be all down hill from now on...
If it don't fit, use a hammer to make it fit....
Liked by Steves-s and Bryan-the-pirate and
#5158

Question of the Day?

Hi Ed, I agree with you.
I had to learn it. In school, I was often asked why the Mediterranean, despite being very warm year-round, has no coral reefs?
Actually, if you think about it, north of the Red Sea there's one of the most beautiful coral reefs in the world (hopefully it survives), while there's nothing off the Nile, yet it's not that far away. On the coast of North Africa, there aren't many rivers (or large mouths like the Nile), that's true, but the mouths of European rivers are too close to those coasts, in a relatively small (especially compared to the large number of freshwater streams) and closed basin like the Mediterranean.
#5157

Question of the Day?

Hi pat, I think I knew this answer as I find corals fascinating. Apart from the way they are shown on TV, I have been lucky enough to see them first hand.

I went to a hotel at Sharm al Sheik boasting corals, there were none there, there had been many members of a certain unpopular country. Totally undisciplined just breaking off corals as trophies. I watched it happen the poor leader of the group went spare.

Later some years later I had the good fortune to swim over the Great Barrier Reef in 3 different areas. I do not scuba dive but like snorkelling.

The reefs have so many fish around them. A year or so later I was in Thailand and then Phuket and on a dive boat for a week on the Andaman Sea. Swimming among fish for a week it was great.
The water was warm, extremely so. The fish swim at several levels e.g. I had one lot around my head another set at my waist and bigger ones below. Hundreds of them.

The dive boat was an extended fishing boat. There were just cabins for 14 and they had a crew of 12. The Captain answered my questions, he had seen the boat on the stocks, it was a speculative build.
He found a couple of investors and they agreed to have the boat extended, basically sawn in half and lengthened. So the hold was the passenger area. Never saw a fish!
We got on with our bags from a dinghy and then into the cabins a pair of bunk beds and small shower/toilet for each cabin. It was personal service from waking up for breakfast throughout the day.
I did say to the Captain that the dead eyes were not the right way up though!

The area where the fish are and diving occurs is a National Park and we were boarded by the patrols and individually charged much dearer for diving I got away lightly as I was snorkelling. See attached photo.
Roy
#5155

Question of the Day?

The thing is that the unexpected theory of the longest answer is correct, seems to be right.

We must hope that this hypothesis does not get to the likes of the A.I. question master.
Roy
Liked by Steves-s
#5153

Question of the Day?

This question has nothing to do with ships and boats, this falls under the scope of marine biology.🤔
Thankfully I have been interested in it in the past.
Ed
Liked by Steves-s and AlessandroSPQR and
#5151

Question of the Day?

Thank you Ross & Roy for your explanations. I asked merely out of curiosity, not a rapid desire to climb to the top.

I'll carry on pitting my feeble wits against the QotD machine, but am quite happy to be floating somewhere in the middle of the listings.
Dave in West Oxfordshire
#5150

Question of the Day?

Hi Oxford D If you look at your score before you answer the QoD you will see you have one unanswered question and your score was recuced to 77%. Get it right and you get 80%.
Roy
Liked by Nickthesteam
#5149

Question of the Day?

Dave

In your case, you still have 5 more days before your wrong answer of 25 days ago drops off. If you keep making correct answers for the next 5 days, your old, wrong answer will fall off and your score will increase by 3%.
In my score I have 26 more days before the wrong answer falls off and I go up by 3%
The game scores on total correct answers in a rolling 30 day period
Force nothing, waste nothing, leave nothing undone
Liked by AlessandroSPQR
#5148

Question of the Day?

I have selected the correct answer today & yesterday, but my overall score has been stuck at 80%, any idea why that is?
Dave in West Oxfordshire
#5147

Question of the Day?

I had to look up the term in Italian.
When I saw it, the answer was clear.
This maneuver on pleasure boats, mostly sloop-rigged ones, is quite easy.
In Italy, it's called "abbattuta," but many call it "strambata." In reality, a "strambata" is a more sudden and almost involuntary "abbattuta."
I wasn't familiar with the various steps for performing it on larger sailing vessels (especially those with square sails).
I found a video that demonstrates it very precisely.
I'll wait to post it so as not to ruin the game for others.
Pat surely knows it by heart, for me seeing it on such large ships was very interesting.
Liked by RossM

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