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First of all, the Master must have close contact with the department heads because the daily management is delegated .[?deli¨Àit] ίÍÐ to them although the Master himself is responsible for the overall safety and personnel management.

Secondly, the Master himself must know his job well and know when to do what and how.

Thirdly, the Master should be very strict in himself in discipline and behavior.

Fourthly, he should be fair in job assignment, pay distribution and other daily management. But if someone on board breaks the Master¡¯s order or the rules on purpose, the Master will have to penalize [?pi:n?laiz] ³Í·£ the offender and can consider firing him according to the procedure of the ship owner.

ÕâÊÇÒ»¸ö¿¼Ñé´¬³¤¹ÜÀíÄÜÁ¦µÄÎÊÌ⣬¿ÉÄܲ»Í¬´¬³¤Óв»Í¬µÄ¹ÜÀí¾­ÑéºÍ°ì·¨£¬µ«ÊÇ´¬¶«Ï£Íû´¬³¤ÔÚÕâ·½ÃæÓнϺõİ취¡£ÓÐЩ´¬³¤ÔڻشðÕâÀàÎÊÌâʱ£¬»á²»¼Ù˼Ë÷µØ˵£º¡°I will dismiss those who do not listen to me¡±¡£ÎÒÃÇÕâÑùµÄºÍ´¬³¤Î´ÃâÌ«°ÔµÀÁË¡£ÉÏÊö´ð°¸Ö»ÊDZÊÕ߸öÈ˼û½â£¬½÷¹©²Î¿¼¡£

12. Did you have the experience of working with foreign crews?

Yes, I have worked on four ships of mixed crew from China, China Taiwan, Philippine, Vietnam, Russia, South Korea, Japan, Burma and Ukraine. ʵÊÂÇóÊÇ¡£µ«ÊÇ£¬ÍâÅÉ×ÊÀúÊÇÍâ¹ú´¬¶«ºÜ¿´ÖеÄÊ£¬Èç¹ûÄãÓкܺõÄÍâÅÉ×ÊÀú£¬¿ÉǧÍò²»Òª´í¹ýÈô¬¶«ÖªµÀµÄ»ú»á¡£

13. How do you differentiate the Chinese crews and the Philippine crews? Or how do you like the Philippine (Korean, Vietnamese, Indian, Burmese, Ukrainian, Russian, British etc.) seamen?

I had the experience of working with the Filipino crew. The Filipinos are mostly very professional and obedient. Sometimes they are also demanding in terms of wages. As a whole, they are very nice seafarers.

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ÔڻشðÕâÀàÎÊÌâʱ£¬ÇмɰÑÆäËû¹ú¼ÒµÄº£Ô±ËµµÃÒ»ÎÞÊÇ´¦£¬Èç¹ûÄãÈÏΪÈ˼Òʲô¶¼²»ÊǵĻ°£¬ÄÇôºÜÄÑÏëÏóÄãÔÚδÀ´µÄ¹¤×÷ÖÐÄܺÍÈ˼ÒÅäºÏ·¢¡£ºÎ¿ö£¬²»ÂÛÄĸö¹ú¼Ò¡¢ÄĸöÎÄ»¯µÄÈ˶¼ÓкÃÈ˺ͻµÈË¡£Òª¾¡Á¿Ëµ³öÈ˼ҵij¤´¦¡£´¬Ô±¶ÓÎé±¾À´¾ÍºÜ¹ú¼Ê»¯£¬ÔÚÒ»¸öÀàËÆ¡°ÁªºÏ¹ú¡±µÄ¹¤×÷ÍŶÓÀÄܺͲ»Í¬¹ú¼®µÄ¡¢²»Í¬ÎÄ»¯µÄ¡¢²»Í¬ÐÔ¸ñµÄÈËÏà´¦£¬ÏÔµÃÊ®·ÖÖØÒª¡£

14. Can you tell me about the companies you have worked for? What are the differences among these companies?

The company I have worked for the past ten years is a state-owned company. It is a good company. But the management of the company is, in some ways, different from foreign shipowners companies.

ʵÊÂÇóÊÇ¡£Í¬Ñù£¬Ò²²»Ï£ÍûÄã¹ý¶àµØ±áµÍÄãÔø¾­¹¤×÷¹ýµÄ¹«Ë¾£¬ÒòΪ¼ÈÈ»ÄãÔ÷ºÞËùÓÐÔ­À´µÄ¹«Ë¾£¬ÄãÒ²¿ÉÄÜ»áÔ÷ºÞÄã¼´½«·þÎñµÄй«Ë¾¡£¶øÊÂÇéÍùÍùÊÇ£¬ÔÚ´¬¶«ÈÏΪ£¬¹«Ë¾ºÍ´¬¶«·¢Éú³åͻʱ£¬²¢²»¼ûµÃÄ㹫˾µÄÎÊÌ⣬ҲÐíÊÇÄã±¾È˾Ͳ»ÊʺÏÔÚÔ­À´µÄ¹«Ë¾¹¤×÷¡£ 15. How is a passage/voyage plan made on board ships? What materials do you need to refer to when you make such plans?

Usually, a passage plan should be made before a new voyage starts. The Master should give the Second Officer the sailing instructions and his intentions on the sailing routes and before the Second Officer prepares the draft plan. Then the Master is supposed to check it very carefully. If something wrong is found in the passage plan, the Master should ask the Second Officer to correct it immediately. If nothing is wrong about the draft, the plan shall be ratified and implemented.

When the Second Officer is making the draft plan, the Master should help provide some important information sources for the Second Officer, such as the port entry guidance, the sailing directions, lists of lights, tidal stream tables, deep draught vessel planning guide, the IMO ship route guidance, government and port authority¡¯s regulations, pilot charts, notice to mariner, weather information, and the voyage plan and so on.

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The Master should ensure that the plan covers ¡°berth to berth¡± area in the passage. And the Master should help the Second Officer to select the best sailing route that will save fuel and time, and avoid bad weather conditions. 16. Can you describe the preparation procedures before entering the US ports?

First, I must check all the certificates for the vessel and the seamen to make sure all the necessary certificates are available to deal with the customs clearances, the sanitary checks and other port checks. In addition, I must prepare such publications as currently corrected navigational charts, US costal pilot guide, light list book, light list book, tide tables, US inland rules of navigation, and recent notice to mariners.

Forty-eight hours prior to entry to a US port, I shall conduct the following emergency steering drills and log them into the record books: operation of the main steering gear from steering compartment, communication between bridge and steering compartment, and alternative power supply. I shall also inform the Qualified Individual of my arrival.

Twenty-four hours before arrival in a US port, I shall notify the USCG of my ship¡¯s arrival.

Twelve hours prior to arrival in a US port, the following equipment shall be tested and recorded in the log book: primary and second steering gear, internal control communications and alarms, standing-by emergency generator, and main propulsion machinery.

Drills are also the priorities of my preparatory work. Usually, the port authority of the US pays special attention to the drills. So boat drills, fire-fighting drills and other drills must be carried out before entering into any US port.

Sanitary situation of my ship is another consideration. Proper disposal of garbage on cy ship and anti-pollution devices examination are very important.

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All in all, much more care should be taken before entry into any US port than in the ports in other countries.

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17. Did you encounter any problems during PSC inspections in the US ports? No, I have never met any big problems because I always made good preparation before my vessel called at the US port. Each time I was able to go through the PSC inspections smoothly. Or you can say:

Yes, I once had a problem during PSC inspection in a US port. The ARPA couldn¡¯t be activated since the power supply was out of work. The USCG only allowed us a few hours to repair it. To their satisfaction, the ARPA was back to normal after only one hour. Luckily we didn¡¯t have any fine imposed on us. I understand from this experience that good preparations in advance are very important. Even if there is a problem, I will ask my crew to rectify it in the least possible time.

18. How should the pre-departure seminar be conducted in the port? According to my experience, a safety meeting shall be held prior to departure and some of the important issues like the un-berthing operation (including the deck and engine room), cargo & hull lashing check, stowaway check, cooperation with the pilot and other engineering (technical) matters should be discussed at the meeting.

19. Why should the Master always be aware of the actions being taken by the pilot?

Well, it¡¯s because the presence of the pilot on the bridge does not relieve the Master from taking any measures necessary to assure the safety of the ship and marine environment. If he finds that the pilot¡¯s orders are

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