After leaving Turkey and cruising a whole night through the Greek islands we approached the Turkish mainland again in the early morning. I had set my pilot time for 06.00 as I wanted to get in before the sun got hot enough to get the Etesian winds going. The two cruise docks of the port have been constructed in a NW direction, so most of the time you approach with the wind right on the stern. That means that you do not drift. That is the best you can have as being pushed forward is easier to control than being pushed sideways. The main engines are always strong enough to cope with the push forward, the thrusters not always with the push sideways. However the wind does not always blow from the North West, it can come from the North East as well and then it is almost on the beam and if strong enough, will be a challenge for the thrusters. So the earlier you arrive the less the chance that there is wind. One good thing is that in the last few years all the Turkish ports in this area have been supplied with a 2500 HP tug. Built in Turkey but designed by the Dutch company Damen, who seems nowadays the tugboat supplier for the whole world, as everywhere the same models are popping up. Not that I mind, with this standardization you know exactly what to expect and only the quality of the tugboat captain is then the unknown factor. Today the tugboat was not needed and had parked itself near the corner of the pier to prevent me from bumping into it. There was a bit of wind, towards the dock, so I used that to come alongside with a controlled drift. The sailors having the luxury not to have to pay out the lines, but they just drop them on the dock, as the light wind held the ship nicely alongside until all lines were tied up. Continue reading
