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Classes
& Services
U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary (USCGAUX) courses provide instruction to
boaters at all levels, from the fundamental to the advanced. Our courses
are taught by experienced and knowledgeable instructors committed to the
highest standards of the U.S. Coast Guard. Many insurance companies will
offer discounts on boat insurance to individuals who successfully complete
this course. Individuals who successfully complete the course and exam are
awarded certificates and cards.
Vessel Examinations
USCGAUX also offers free vessel
examinations to those who own a boat, as well as courses on how to
become a vessel examiner (VE). Both examinations and instructions
are conducted by experienced USCGAUX personnel and will give you piece of
mind out on the water! Vessels that pass examination are issued a
examination sticker and those who become VE's will be issued a VE
certificate certifying their skill. For a vessel
examination contact Leland Piper of Flotilla 11-01 at Lbpip72@msn.com
Boating
Safety & Seamanship Skills (BS&S)
This Course is offered in the spring and fall
for 2 hours a night. A total of a 32 hour course. New classes
will starting soon. The topics following are covered in this course:
- Boater's language; types of
boats; outboard motors and stern drives; hull design; uses of boats;
other power plants; materials for constructing boats; your intended
use; the Coast Guard Customer Info-line; marine surveyors; buying a
boat.
- Requirements for your boat;
your boat's equipment; legal considerations; substance abuse; boating
accident reports; Courtesy Marine Examinations.
- Legal considerations;
practical considerations; the towing vehicle; balancing the load;
handling your trailer; pre-departure checks; preparing to launch;
launching; retrieving; storing your boat and trailer; theft
prevention; Zebra mussels; float plan.
- Leave with a full tank;
fueling your boat; your boat's propellor; cars and boats; twin screws;
jet drives; loading your boat; getting started; leaving a pier;
"man" overboard; docking; mooring to a permanent anchor;
anchoring; towing a skier; heavy weather; small boat safety.
- Protection of ATONs; buoyage
systems; waterway marks; how waterways are marked; light
characteristics; chart symbols; light structures; lights on bridges;
electronic aids to navigation; a word to the wise; navigation
publications.
- Two sets of rules; to whom do
the rules apply; what is a vessel; the general responsibility rule;
general considerations; conduct in narrow channels; traffic separation
schemes; vessel traffic services; stand-on or give-way; rules for
special vessels; risk of collision; bend signals; restricted
visibility; vessel lights and shapes; vessels at anchor; diving
operations; distress signals; drawbridge signals; penalties.
- Types of inland waters; inland
navigation; inland seamanship; river currents; maintaining inland
waterways; dams; locks; river charts; commercial traffic; before you
go. (This lesson typically will not be taught in coastal courses)
- Piloting tools; maps and
charts; chart features; your chart's general information block; other
charted information; your magnetic compass; position on the earth's
surface; locating a point on a chart; distance on the earth's surface;
measuring distance; course plotting; sources of compass error;
correcting a compass reading; positioning; speed-time-distance; dead
reckoning; practice your art.
- Types of marine engines;
marine engines; selecting a propeller; induction systems; ignition
systems; flame arresters; cooling systems; gasoline considerations;
batteries; maintenance; winterizing your boat; spring fitting-out;
troubleshooting.
- Line or rope; rope materials;
kinds of rope; measuring rope; selecting your ropes; care of rope;
making up line; knots, bends, and hitches; splices; securing lines;
dipping the eye.
- Sources of weather
information; wind and boating; wind and waves; understanding weather;
weather and heat; fog; non-frontal weather.
- Radios used on boats;
functions of radios; licenses; selecting your VHF-FM radio;
installation; operating your VHF-FM; maintain a radio watch; channels
have special purposes; some "no no's"; copies of the rules;
calling another station; procedure words; phonetic alphabet; routine
radio check; distress, urgency, and safety calls; crew training.
- Security matters in today's
world. Learn how keeping alert on the water can keep your fellow
boaters safe from harm's way.
- Small boat safety; personal
watercraft; hypothermia; motorboats and sailboats; carbon monoxide
poisoning; float plan; U.S. Coast Guard District Offices; instructions
for using a course plotter; metric conversion system.
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