| Watch Standing |
Watch standing the bane of a sailor’s life. One must work a
normal 8 to 12-hour day, and then clean up, put on a clean
uniform, and report for a four-hour watch, sometimes in the
middle of the night. A normal daily routine and a normal night’s
sleep become nonexistent.
Watch: A watch is a vital job/position/station on a ship that must
be constantly manned for the ship to operate effectively,
efficiently, and safely.
Some watch stations are located in major operational areas of
a ship, such as the bridge, engineering, navigation, etc. Some
watch stations respond to emergencies, such as fire or flooding,
be it on the ship or on other nearby ships. Some watch stations
patrol the ship to insure security and good order and
discipline, and to respond to disorders or criminal acts. Some
types of watches include engineering watches (such as
Engineering Officer of the Watch or Damage Control Watch
Officer), navigational watches (such as Officer of the Deck,
Boatswain's Mate of the Watch, or Helmsman), security watches
(such as Officer of the Deck, Master-at-Arms, Sounding and
Security, or Pier Sentry), or other types of watches (such as
Anchor, Department Duty Officer, or Command Duty Officer).
Stand Watch: To stand a watch is to man a watch
station for specific period of time.
Watch Stander: A watch stander is a person who has
been trained and has been qualified to stand a particular watch
station.
Watch (or Duty) Sections: Watch standers are assigned to
watch/duty sections. Each section has duty for a length of time,
which may be a number of hours or one or more days. The number
of sections and the number of watch standers in each section
depends upon the number of watches that must be stood and the
number of qualified personnel available to stand the watches.
The highest number of duty sections is usually 6; the lowest is
2; and 3 is the usual number.
Watch Duration: The duration of watches will vary
between commands due to the needs of the commands; however, the
usual duration of a watch is four hours stating at 0400. In the
traditional watch system, leftover from the days of sail, the
ships company is divided into three sections and the day divided
into six watches, each of four hours duration. Each day, a watch
stander would stand a four-hour watch followed by eight hours
off, followed by a four-hour watch, etc. During the times off
watch, the sailor would work at normal job duties, eat, have
some recreation time, and sleep.
Dogging the Watch: Normally a watch is 4 hours long,
which creates 6 watches per day, which is an even number of
watches. With an even number of watches, a watch section would
be standing the same watches every day, such as the mid-watch.
To eliminate this, the 1600-2000 watch is split into two 2-hour
watches to create a 7th watch; this process is called dogging
the watch. Each of these two split watches is called a dogwatch.
Another reason for splitting this watch is that both watches
will be able to eat the evening meal during normal meal hours.
The term dogwatch is said to derive from Sirius, the "Dog
Star” because Sirius is the first star to come into view on the
first dog watch. However, the time of the rising of Sirius
varies with the time of year, so for much of the year Sirus is
below the horizon at sunset. Additionally, since the first
dogwatch (1600–1800) is typically stood during daylight, the
stars are not visible. Another derivation is that someone
standing one of these 'half' watches was said to be “dodging the
watch,” so the watch was named the “dodge watch,” which was
shortened to dogwatch
Ship's Bell: The ship’s bell is used to regulate
the watches. The strikes of the bell (known as a “bell”) to not
indicate the number of the hour; instead, there are eight bells,
one for each half-hour of a four-hour watch. Bells are struck
every half-hour, in pairs to make counting easier, with any odd
bells at the end of the sequence. For example, one bell would be
“ding,” two bells would be “ding-ding,” three bells would be
“ding-ding…ding,” and so on until eight bells would be
“ding-ding… ding-ding… ding-ding… ding-ding.” Eight bells would
indicate the end of a four-hour cycle and a new cycle would
begin.
Relieving the Watch: When relieving a watch, the new watch
stander reports 15 minutes prior to the start of the next watch,
reviews any information pertinent to the watch, receive a
briefing about current and expected events of the watch, and
then relieves the watch. Watch changes are entered into the
watch log.
Watch Log: Most watches have a log book in which
entries are made about things that occur during the watch.
Entries include, changes of the watch, rounds being completed,
course changes, gauge readings, etc.
Uniform for Watch: The uniform required for a watch may
vary from the working uniform to the full-dress uniform. In any
case, the watch stander should report to the watch properly
groomed and wearing a clean, complete uniform that is in good
repair.