Sea Scout Book

Page 23

Nautical Traditions Boatswain’s Call The Boatswain’s Call is a whistle used for passing orders on ships. Some Troops use it regularly to maintain maritime tradition. There are 2 notes - low and high. The low note is the ordinary note obtained by blowing the call with the hand open and the high note is obtained by closing the fingers around the “buoy” but not too tightly.

Ship’s Time The traditional method of indicating time on a ship is by the sounding of a bell. The day is divided into seven watches of four hours each, except the two “dog watches” which are two hours each. This is to give an uneven number of watches so that the crew is on at different times each day. Middle watch Morning watch Forenoon watch Afternoon watch First dog watch Second dog watch First watch

The “call” is the name of the instrument and a “pipe” is the sound it makes. The following pipes are the main ones likely to be used in Sea Scouting:“Stand by” - a warning, followed by a verbal order - e.g. “Troop, fall in” “The Still” - to obtain silence, to stop activity temporarily or as the flag is raised or lowered. “Carry on” - may follow the “Still” or the “Stand by”, meaning resume normal activity. “The Side” - formal salute, welcoming an important visitor “on board”. 21

0000 - 0400 0400 - 0800 0800 - 1200 1200 - 1600 1600 - 1800 1800 - 2000 2000 - 2400


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Sea Scout Book by Scouting Ireland - Issuu