Page 113 - RedWhiteFleet_interiors_Sep10
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CAPTAIN’S LOG
          At the end of every day on the water, each
 themselves are always safe. In 1988, the Harbor Princess had   captain has the responsibility of recording
 a close call while docked at Pier 43½. At 5 a.m. one stormy   all the activity of their vessel for that day
          in the captain’s log. The result is not only
 morning, Captain Jim Reed, who was hired by the Fleet in   an important documentation of the Fleet’s
 1975, received a frantic call to come down to the docks. While   operations, but a remarkable snapshot of
 the ferries are usually secured to the docks with ten lines, the   all the day-to-day history of the Red and
 Harbor Princess was rocking so hard in the wind and waves   White Fleet going back decades, told from
          the perspective of the pilots actually on
 that all but one had come untied. She was taking on water   the boats. In it, you will find everything
 and had detached her rubber knee that protected her from   from accounts of the Fleet’s standard
 crashing into the docks.   tours and smoothest seas to its most
 “I’ve never seen a mass of metal move that violently,”   daring rescues and closest calls. Records
 said Captain Reed. He and a maintenance employee, Jim   of boat condition, fuel usage, dealings
          with other operators around the Bay, and
 Adams, managed to get aboard the thrashing vessel. Without   even guest interactions onboard are just
 enough time to warm up the engines, one failed before they   a few of the entries that may be record-
 had steered the ship safely away from the dock. The situation   ed in the captain’s log. Even doodles
 could quickly have become a catastrophe, as the submarine   and printed pictures sometimes find
          their way into the log, illuminating this
 Pampanito was parked within a few feet. “I knew that if we ran   remarkable text that has preserved the
 into the submarine we would probably both sink right there   everyday details of operating the Red
 at the dock, so I started blowing the whistle as hard as I could   and White Fleet through the years.
 to let everyone know we were in trouble,” recalled Captain
 Reed. A port engineer, Bill Elliot, heard the whistle and came
 running, diving in through a broken window to board the ship.
 In the nick of time, the men managed to restart the engine,
 and Captain Reed was able to steer the ship away from the
 docks. Although the winds were blowing 80–90 knots (92–103
 mph)—hurricane force—he had no choice but to continue
 sailing the vessel to Oakland. Fortunately, they all made it
 across the Bay safely, and the Harbor Princess underwent six
 months of repairs to recover from her windy ordeal.
 Situations like these show the commitment and round-
 the-clock dedication of the Red and White Fleet’s captains and
 employees, who put their own lives at risk in service to the                               ABOVE: Entries in the captain’s log, from decades-old (bottom row) to

                                                                                            the current style (top left). These entries can be as much like a scrapbook as
                                                                                            a status report, including illustrations and diagrams as well as anecdotes.
 112 • Red and White Fleet                                                                                                     Evolution  •  113
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