New Zealand navy ship runs aground and sinks off Samoa
New Zealand says it has rescued all 75 crew and passengers from a wrecked navy vessel that ran aground and sank off Samoa while conducting a reef survey.

HMNZS Manawanui ran aground off the south coast of Upolu while conducting a reef survey.
Yeah. I can imagine the following message being relayed:I think they found it.
Some working ship have the helipad above the level of the bridge—the bow looking bulbous.In better days:
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Ahhhh... Roger Moore in his cat-loving woman-hating character.Some working ship have the helipad above the level of the bridge—the bow looking bulbous.
The last time I saw ships like these outside of documentaries—was in the movie *Ffolkes*.
Ahhhh... Roger Moore in his cat-loving woman-hating character.
Ffolkes was the US title - the UK saw it as North Sea Hijack.
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Sexism and Homophobia Can’t Diminish Commander Gray’s Heroic Actions - YOUR EX
Commander Yvonne Gray’s swift decision-making has been credited with saving 75 lives when the navy ship she commanded, HMNZS Manawanui, was lost off the coast of Samoa on Saturday.gayexpress.co.nz
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Sexism and Homophobia Can’t Diminish Commander Gray’s Heroic Actions - YOUR EX
Commander Yvonne Gray’s swift decision-making has been credited with saving 75 lives when the navy ship she commanded, HMNZS Manawanui, was lost off the coast of Samoa on Saturday.gayexpress.co.nz
She's a very well qualified officer.
Warfare Officer according to the link Yahya posted, which starts out at OOW, so she'll definitely have bridge time.After joining the New Zealand Navy, Gray served as the commanding officer of the Navy’s Mine Counter Measures Team before taking the helm of the Manawanui.
First RNZN command posting after a stint in systems management. It doesn't mention what she did in the RN or how much bridge time she had.
Which tells you something about them…The people whinging about diversity hires would probably be making exactly the same comment if it was a Maori officer.
Warfare Officer according to the link Yahya posted, which starts out at OOW, so she'll definitely have bridge time.
Here is the ship in the movie:Some working ship have the helipad above the level of the bridge—the bow looking bulbous.
The last time I saw ships like these outside of documentaries—was in the movie *Ffolkes*.
Yes, it should, assuming that this ship is big enough to have an XO. Crew is a minimum of 39, though it sounds like they were carrying ~64 RNZN crew, 4 crew from other militaries and 7 scientists for a total of 75. I'm not sure where the RNZN would insist on having an XO to handle things when you're talking 40-60 crew.Starts out as OOW, yes, but after that?
I would think that the road to the captain's chair passes of necessity through the XO's position. The sideways shift from MCM specialist is what motivates my concern that this is a DEI job.
A little research is a wonderful thing.Starts out as OOW, yes, but after that?
I would think that the road to the captain's chair passes of necessity through the XO's position. The sideways shift from MCM specialist is what motivates my concern that this is a DEI job.
Neither are good at mapping the sea floor.Personally, I would rather suggest they have the job done by an aircraft or even, a satelite with lidar.
Check the small print/details certainly but the decision to risk the ship belongs far above the pay grade of the captain.
Not seen anyone pointing fingers at these August folk........
I believe my option is cheaper and just as accurate for gross detail.
2023, 2024 (Gray aboard as skipper).
All you had to say is that she'd held command for at least many months before the accident and possibly close to two years.it's been my experience that it's the people who protest about diversity who are inevitably the actual competence problem.
In heavy seas and high winds, working around a reef that hasn't been mapped in 37 years.Bizarre, then, that she manages to ground a hydrographic survey ship.
Well, it was 1/5 of their entire manned force.I'm kind of more concerned that this one ship probably represents a sizeable percentage of New Zealand's naval assets.
Mapping the damn reef was what the ship was built for!In heavy seas and high winds, working around a reef that hasn't been mapped in 37 years.
Ask any sailor if they want to be poking around reefs in those conditions, they'll tell you hell no.
Which is NOT a job you do in bad weather.Mapping the damn reef was what the ship was built for!
No, it is the CO's fault. Her ship, her fault.Too early to lay clear blame with so many unknowns (to us anyway), but I've never seen such a determined rush to defend the competency of the commanding officers of a ship that ran aground or struck any other stationary object, either.