TraderVic
40 Cal
Ok, curiosity has me on this one. Two years, two tours to SE Asia on destroyers.....stood a lot of watches.......what's a "dog watch" ?It’s something they have in the Navy, they even have a Dog Watch.
Ok, curiosity has me on this one. Two years, two tours to SE Asia on destroyers.....stood a lot of watches.......what's a "dog watch" ?It’s something they have in the Navy, they even have a Dog Watch.
I've had too many sips of night tonic to explain properly, but a dog watch was a shortened watch from the normal 4 hour RN watch time in the age of sail. I'm sure someone will chime in to correct if needed.Ok, curiosity has me on this one. Two years, two tours to SE Asia on destroyers.....stood a lot of watches.......what's a "dog watch" ?
For wearing, I have the upgrade to that. My "Yes V7" watch. They now have wireless charging so no more batteries. I like knowing when sunrise, moonrise, civil twilight, astronomical twilight, when we hit solstice, etc will happen. It can be a compass too. It can be set for anywhere in the world and automatically does DST for you. Plain time is boring. It brings a smile to my face when I see the sun setting on the horizon and I look at my watch and say "Yup, right on time"Sundials are pretty quiet and traditional. Documented back to the stone age.
Looked it up and it's a short extension of an evening watch, 4-6 pm or 6-8 pm.I've had too many sips of night tonic to explain properly, but a dog watch was a shortened watch from the normal 4 hour RN watch time in the age of sail. I'm sure someone will chime in to correct if needed.
I wear the Timex expedition watch. Worn one since my army days. Inexpensive and works. Think you get so close to game that they hear your watch definitely better at stocking game than meCan't beat a 42 dollar woods watch.
They are loud but not THAT loud.
Hmmmm.....Two years on destroyers and I never experienced a watch rotation like this.Navy here. The purpose of a "Dog Watch" is to cause a rotation in the watchstanders. The typical watch rotation is 4 hours on and 8 hours off. So standing a half watch means you do 2 on and 6 off. After that you're back to 4 and 8, for a week.
I wear an old analog too, and have had many deer as close as 5' away, so no! They don't hear it.Many people use mechanical analog watches. I, for one, have never owned a digital watch. What I had and have on my person were watches that "clicked" between one and eight times per second, which brings me to me query, . . .
My hunting area is heavy, dense forest. Shooting range for white tail and black bear is within easy round ball muzzleloading distances. Elk are in the same general area but are thousands of feet higher and much less tolerant of disturbance — they'll disappear into the remainder of Lolo National Forest, to be seen perhaps three months later. Does the "clicking" of my watch signal animals, not just game animals in season, that something is in the area that is strange and therefore dangerous?
Such regular monotonous clicking will probably lose being noticeable within a short time. But how many legally "takeable" game animals are so alerted that they become invisible to my sensenses or leave the area?
Hmmmm.....Two years on destroyers and I never experienced a watch rotation like this.
Interesting..Nine years, 1979-1988, two Knox Frigates, and USS New Jersey saw it quite often.
Enter your email address to join: