August 19, 2005
Navy embarks on eastern
Arctic tour
Mock rescue to be staged
off Cape Dorset
JOHN
THOMPSON
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Two
Kingston-class minesweepers, like the one shown above, will tour the eastern
Arctic for five weeks this summer. Along the way, the ship will stop in Cape
Dorset for a major search and rescue exercise with the Canadian Rangers, the
coast guard and the air force. (PHOTO COURTESY OF DND)
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Fog shrouds the HMCS Glace
Bay, a Canadian minesweeper bound for the Nunavik village of Quaqtaq last Friday,
when cries in the background interrupt a telephone interview with Lt.-Cmdr.
Scott Healey.
"Man overboard! Man
overboard! Man overboard!"
"Just a second,"
he says, pausing to bark orders at officers to move it. His 30-odd crew are
in the midst of a snap rescue exercise, where divers must rescue a dummy thrown
into the water.
"We try to get one
in whenever we can."
The Glace Bay left St.
John's, Newfoundland with the HMCS Shawinigan on Saturday, Aug. 6, abandoning
sunny skies and 23 C temperatures as they embarked on a five-week tour of the
eastern Arctic.
The tour is intended to
raise the profile of the navy in some remote locations they haven't visited
in recent memory. Their stop at Kuujjuaq on Thursday, Aug. 11, lasted only a
few hours, just long enough for municipal officials to climb aboard for a quick
visit before the boats continued on their mission.
Their itinerary shows plans
to continue skirting the coast of Nunavik, visiting the villages of Quaqtaq,
Kangiqsujuaq, Ivujiviq and Puvirnituq.
They'll then cut across
the open waters of Hudson Bay toward Churchill, Manitoba, where they will remain
from Aug. 17-21. Afterwards, they're scheduled to visit the Kivalliq communities
of Arviat, Whale Cove, Rankin Inlet, Chesterfield Inlet and Coral Harbour. The
tour ends on Aug. 29 after visiting Cape Dorset and Kimmirut.
Because none of these communities
have deep-water ports, the vessels will remain a safe distance from the beach
as smaller boats are sent ashore.
The largest rescue operation
will be staged off Cape Dorset, involving the Canadian Rangers, coast guard
and air force as well. An Aurora surveillance plane, a maritime patrol aircraft
from Greenwood, N.S. and a Twin Otter from Yellowknife will assist during the
patrol. To maintain an element of surprise, some details of the scenario haven't
been announced.
Healey acknowledged the
navy's role in real-life rescue operations would be limited to cases where ships
are already in an area. If a large airliner crashed into Arctic waters, the
role of the navy would likely be limited to dredging up the remains.
"If you have, God
forbid, a big crash in January, nobody's going to get up there. No navy in the
world could."
Healey's familiar with
using sophisticated sonar equipment during a search operation - he helped with
the frantic search for survivors after a Swiss Air plane crashed into the ocean
off Peggy's Cove, N.S., in September 1998.
The pair of Kingston-class
vessels reach just over 55 metres in length, making them much smaller than the
134-metre frigate that ploughed toward Pangnirtung last year during Exercise
Narwhal. Each boat carries a crew of 30, compared to the HMCS Montreal's crew
of 225.
The smaller vessels have
the advantage of being more fuel efficient and maneuverable, Healey said. "You
can get into a lot of places the huge ships can't get into."
Eleven Canadian Rangers
are also aboard the two vessels, giving them a chance to visit communities and
share their knowledge with southern naval officers. "We get to learn from
those living in these places," he said.
Healey did not comment
on whether he'd like to visit Hans Island, the disputed territory claimed by
both Canada and Denmark, but the tiny island is many miles to the north of where
they'll be.
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