Tough Question
I can only answer for the Kingston area and how we like things done.
Any one can use any mooring and almost all of Kingston's will support 3 or 4 boats tied to them at the same time. some of the graveyard ones we only like one large vessel on at a time, but all the local guys will just go to another if someone is already on them.
Some one should be on your vessel at all times.
If you are on a mooring and a larger boat comes up and ask permission to tie, then the smaller boat must give up and allow the larger boat to take the mooring, then raft or tie off behind.
You should always ask permission to enter the area of dive operations, not just for courtesy, but because it's the law and in the collision regulations. If any thing happened to a diver and you have not ask and been granted permission you can be charged with a criminal offense. I get a little Pi$$ed off when a boat comes flying up to me and throws a line at me without even checking to see were my divers are or asking permisson to come along side.
All of the regular charter captain's will allow another vessel to tie off, You do not have to wait, just call on VHF radio 16 or 10 If you do not have a VHF radio you shouldn't be out there.......
No one should have to wait "for they're turn" some times a captain will tell you that they will be done in 10 or 15 minutes and ask you to wait as they are recovering divers.
I have had small boats refuse to let me tie up and tell me "I was here first, it's my mooring".........NOT a good thing to say to me...
Who do they think put up the mooring in the first place????
Who do they think spliced the line they are on????
Who do they think put the 5 ton mooring block there???
Well I'll tell you who did... POW and who is POW? It's the local guys, mostly charter boat captains and dive store operator's
so without them no one has a nice mooring line and buoy to tie off too. In most other areas it's SOS and it's still made up of local guys in the area who work hard so anchor damage is no longer a danger and you have great wrecks to dive on.
I have my back yard shed filled with 10 POW/SOS mooring buoys, another 20 or so jugs, many feet of chain, about 2500 feet of mooring line, thimbles, huge connectors, and all the stuff needed to keep mooring in good shape. Lots of nights in the winter I sit and splice thimbles into line and inspect line so that we have everthing ready for the next season. I'm not the only one the other guys all do stuff like that. Ask Tom R he set up the times with the boats and divers last year so that mooring all went up in good time.
That being said most charter boat guys don't take it well when some boat with 3 or 4 divers tell them they can't have the line that they worked so hard to put there. but 99% of the time we never have any problems and people are understanding and courteous. Here in Kingston we usually ask for a donation to POW if you are using the mooring as they do cost money. We are not like Tobermory and have Parks Canada doing the work and collecting money for the moorings.
Not only do the Kingston area charter and stores do the work to maintain the mooring they pay a "mooring fee" so that we can afford to keep the POW mooring project going.
Check out
POW and support them if interested.
Damm I think this is the longest post I've ever posted........
I hope it answered your question.
