John Barell's Posts (5)

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Captain Last Man to Leave Sinking Ship

3438925213?profile=originalIt is distressing to this sailor to read accounts of the terrible loss of life onboard the South Korean ferry, most all high school students off for a vacation.

There was an inexperienced third mate at the helm and after she made a hard right turn, the ship capsized.

And who were some of the first "rescued" and off the ship? The captain and his officers.  

Same for the captain of the Costa Line's"Concordia," the ship that ran aground of an Italian Island (see photo).  He miraculously was one of the first off the ship as well.

What happened to the maritime tradition where the Captain, the Commanding Officer, was the last to depart a sinking ship? What does leadership mean?

Fortunately, both skippers, although I shouldn't use that honored term for these men, have been arrested on multiple charges.

Remember Captain of the US Airways flight that glided to a perfect landing in the Hudson River? Captain Sullenberger strode through waist deep waters to the rear of the cabin checking that all passengers had, indeed, departed safely before he did so.

Reminds me also of recently reading history of USS Hornet CV-8, the General James Doolittle carrier that launched those B-25s  in first raid on Tokyo early in 1942.  Later that year, in battle of Santa Cruz, I believe, it was kamikazied to death and Admiral Halsey ordered all to abandon ship on 26 October.  The captain, Charles P. Mason, was the last man to climb over the side and  leave his sinking vessel there to be rescued with the rest of his crew.  

What happened to this tradition?  Maybe it's different for commercial vessels?

Sad commentary when captain is first, not last, to depart a sinking ship.

What we owe to captains like Charles P. Mason of Hornet and Chesley Sullenberger of US Airways!

Bravo Zulu!

John Barell

www.absolutebearing.info

www.morecuriousminds.com

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Your ticket to high adventure.

For those who still enjoy reading a good book, John Barell has once again met his mark by telling an engaging story of one man's inner self doubt, resolve and redemption for decisions made during the worst of situations. One need not be active or former military to appreciate the perspective of making decisions that could define your life or change the course of history for many lives.

The weight of responsibility is great when lives hang on decisions one junior Navy officer makes, only to live forever with the burden and consequences that prove costly to his career.  This could be the story of many who have been forced by circumstance to make those decisions and only through strength of character and moral bearing can withstand the trials of such weight, to carry on another day. 

Leaders are those entrusted to make critical decisions when the stakes are highest. This story provides insight to that which defines the "Absolute Bearing" required for leadership.

Available on Amazon, Kindle and may other online sources:

http://www.amazon.com/Absolute-Bearing-John-Barell/dp/1490505962

Dale Jacobs

Citizen of Antarctica

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ABSOLUTE BEARING--Maximum Hazard at Sea

How do you avoid collision at sea?

You’re steaming alone on a ship of the line through a violent storm at midnight, plowing into fifty foot waves that crash over the bow onto the navigation bridge.  Winds whip the ship port to starboard and everything in the pilot house becomes a dangerous missile.

Then, all of sudden, radar spots Skunk Alpha approaching from beyond five thousand yards.  You follow her track, constant bearing decreasing range, until radar dies and one man goes missing from CIC.

You’re in charge as ships draw dangerously closer. What do you do?  How do you avoid being in extremis, the situation everybody at sea wants to avoid.

This is the opening of ABSOLUTE BEARING,  a searing story of fatality at sea, tense court room drama and the search for redemption for the young officer-of-the-deck Lt. Stephen Wheatley.

The Caine Mutiny meets The Poseidon Adventure.

How would you have lived with the consequences of not calling the Captain when his Night Orders so dictated? How do you redeem your honor and good bearing?

This is the story of Absolute Bearing--growing beyond the arrogance that resulted in tragedy.

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Available on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Absolute+Bearing  

Free download to Kindle for Mac or Windows 8: http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=sv_kstore_3?ie=UTF8&docId=1000493771 

FREE on Kindle:  4 and 5 December, 2013

Read Chapter one at "Look Inside"

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