How I SEA it! This is not your Love Boat or Captain Stubing... This is a real glimpse at the Captain's life on a mega cruise ship! Subscribe for insight on a Captain's career, her ship, crew, & trusty sidekick (a hairless cat named Bug Naked) & of course the adventures that only a life at sea can bring. Why? Because if you can SEA it, you can BE it!
Having clear lines of communication during a incident is critical. Does this area have it's own separate backup power in case of loss of power to the ship? I am thinking of the incident with the MV Dali.
You and Bug have a very special bond. I enjoyed seeing her on our cruise, in April. Cats give so much love. Isn't it nice, that they let us live with them. (Ha, Ha). Thank-you for the purr-fect video.
With all due respect, I don't think she mentions if Bug was bought or adopted in the video? And again, with all due respect, you don't need to essentially try to put someone down if they did buy. Adopting is great but it's not for everyone and ultimately, if people didn't buy the kittens that were being sold, they'd end up in a shelter and being adopted anyway.
If any cruise line allowed passengers to bring their pets they would get no bookings from me. I am allergic to animal hair and can end up barely able to see my eyes puff up so much. It's lovely to go on a cruise and know this won't happen. Captain's pet is different, Captain's get special treatment.
OMG can you imagine if people brought their pets on cruises. Virtually impossible. People can be so nasty. Just got back from a cruise and a blind man had his guide dog quietly lying at his feet in the buffet. Heard several rude comments. People need to check out facts before they whine.
I thought Morse Code was retired and like you've said, never used it outside of school. Does the Maritime Academy still teach it? I don't think the U.S. Naval Academy teaches it either.
I needed to learn morse 35 years ago to get my A ham certificate in the UK.Again hardly used it since.I would struggle to receive now ,but could still send probably.Is it still a requirement as my daughter is currently on MSC Seascape as a cadet?
Morse Code should really be called Vail's Cypher. Morse's original version had a number assigned to a particular word, which the operator would look up in a book; that would have been a code. Vail, the project's engineer, realised that Morse's code would have limited flexibility so instead created a cypher where letters and numbers were each assigned a pattern of dots and dashes. When I was in the Royal Signals, we used the spare set in the truck to scan for the best frequencies for our "scheds" - if we heard Morse, we avoided that frequency because it would block out any transmission.