White buoy with horizontal blue stripe
always approach a mooring buoy bow first slowly from the downwind side so when you tie off the boat can drift back with out fouling the mooring chain or line
Titanic's voyage began on April 10th, 1912, when she cast off her mooring lines in Southampton, England.
Keep out: A diamond shape with a cross means boats must stay out.A buoy or sign may show only the symbol or may also indicate Swim Area, Beach, Keep Out, No Boats, Closed Area, Dam, etc.A diamond shape with a cross means boats must keep out. A buoy or sign may show only the symbol or may also indicate Swim Area, Beach, Keep Out, No Boats, Closed Area, Dam, etc.A white buoy, or other water marker, with orange crossed diamonds indicates area is off-limits to all vessels. These areas could be blocked off for a number of reasons, such as swimming areas, dams, and spillways. If there is a single orange diamond with black lettering, it indicates dangers in the water such as stumps, rocks or dams. Either way, you should definitely avoid those areas.
Keep it off of the right side of the boat. A red buoy usually marks the right side of the channel when you are returning from the sea or going upstream. You can remember it by the saying, red, right, returning.Keep it on your right when heading upstream
Answer 1A buoy is anything that's used to provide flotation (buoyancy) to another object.Some buoys are tethered and allow navigational aids to float in place, others (sonobuoys, radiobuoys) are free-floating or tethered to objects suspended in the water column (like fishing nets).More examples are listed below, all of them have the common purpose of providing buoyancy.________________________Answer 2A buoy is a floating object in the water that is anchored to the bottom of the body of water.Bouys have two main purposes.The primary purpose is a navigation aid. They mark channels into harbors and deep water channels in rivers as well as mark off hazards and specific areas. "Red, Right, Returning" is a phrase that sailors use to remember that the red bouys should be on the starboard side of the channel and the green ones on the left when coming into the harbor. They may or may not have lights and/or sound devices (a bell being common) on them.There is also the anchor or mooring bouy that is found in harbors and lakes so that the owner of the bouy's boat can attach a rope for mooring purposes.
The name of a ship. Out to the NOAA for use with the National Data Buoy Center. One of the bouys is off of the coast of Louisana in the Gulf of Mexico.
Off-road vehicles are typically allowed only in designated areas within National Parks, but most parks have no designated areas for motorbike scrambling or other off-road vehicles.
Yes, in designated smoking areas, usually in machine rooms off watch.
No, because the waves (ripples) go on (out) forever until they hit something. The ripples may not be much but they are there.
It means to cut all ties and escape. Perhaps a naval saying for cutting the anchor or mooring lines, which would be much quicker than hauling in the anchor or casting off.
== == The word Moor has many meanings. It also depends of you are referring to a group of people of not. 100 percent of the time people are referring to a group of people so I will give that definition. A Moor is any native, indigenous, autochthon, aboriginals of North, Central, South America and the Caribbean islands or melaninated person on the planet earth that recognize and know there full status in society and government before slavery and oppression. The true first class citizen and status bearer of the continents. The word Moor can be seen in every language of the planet in many variations of spelling. Spelled as Moor Means Navigator Of The Seven Seas Guided By The North gate/Pole/Star. Spelled as Muur means One Of Light.
It is the area designated for the public to bring their appliances, usually for return, repair, donation, etc.