Boats are generally required to stay at least 100 yards away from navy vessels. However, this distance can vary depending on the specific vessel and situation, as navy ships may have their own safety zones established. Additionally, in certain circumstances, such as during training exercises or operations, the exclusion zone may be larger. Always check local regulations and guidelines for the specific area.
Stay far enough away that the large vessel's helmsman can see you.
50 ft
100 feet
i'm pretty sure you have to be in the military to be a navy seal and you have to be selected. you can't just be like "today i'm gonna join the navy seals.." no
The US Navy doesn't (and didn't) like small combatants in their inventory; especially wooden ones, like the WWII PT Boats. Close to 300 of those boats were intentionally destroyed (burned) in the Philippines at the close of the war. Wooden boats are a maintenance headache; wood rots, and the maintenance inventory of the US Navy was designed & organized to support steel vessels, not wood. Secondly, the USN distains small boat combatants. Small boats are necessary for taxing personnel from vessel to vessel and conducting errands in bays, etc. But not the combatants. Combatants such as the WWII MTB (Motor Torpedo Boats-aka PT boats); and the USN's Brown Water Navy in Vietnam, which utilized a host of riverine craft such as the Swift Boats (PCF-Patrol Craft Fast), PBRs (Patrol Boat River), Alpha Boats (ASPB-Assault Support Patrol Boats), and the Monitors were only a "wartime necessity." And all save some PBRs and two Swift Boats were retained in the US (and the Swift Boats were salvaged from scrap yards by some veterans!). There is no money in small combatants when defense budgets are rationed out to the military. The big money is in "big ticket items" such as warships for the navy, bombers for the air force and tanks for the army. That's where the big money is justified. The army, navy and air force fight for their share of the defense budget each year that it's being offered. Only lately, since Operation Iraqi Freedom began it's campaign, and then only late in the game, has the US Navy become interested again in small patrol boats. So far, probably no more than a hundred such combatants have been placed into service with the USN. These are not the PTs & Swifts of days gone by, but in some cases inflatibles, and civilian appearing water craft painted up in military schemes. There is no more official Brown Water Navy, just some small patrolling in troubles regions over-seas. Coronado in California is training them, as they did during the Vietnam war; Mare Island used to used old Viet War PBRs (those were all fiberglass), but the Mare Island closed down in '95, and tranferred what they had left to Sacramento. Sacramento is surrounded by rivers.
A boater may not approach within 100 yards of a military vessel; it must slow to minimum speed within 500 yards of any naval vessel.
They travelled around in boats, and on horses or sometimes they marched and walked but if they more invading far away areas its most likely for them to be in boats sometimes they even load there horse on the boats to help in battle (text made by kyleburnip-grow topic)
As far as I am quite sure, there were definitely ships... and paddle boats.
Some vessels carry boats so there is no lower limit.
When operating a vessel at greater than no wake speed, you must typically stay at least 100 feet away from a boat ramp or boathouse. This distance may vary depending on local regulations, so it's essential to check specific rules for the area you are navigating. Maintaining this distance helps ensure safety and minimizes disturbances for those launching or retrieving boats. Always be mindful of signage that may indicate specific distance requirements.
The officers on the deck of the Californian, while watching Titanic's rockets, made the catastrophic conclusion that the vessel was summoning back her boats that might have strayed too far in the dark while fishing.
Far, far away is a saying that means something is literally far away.