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Mock drill for trainee fishermen 16.02.10

PEOPLE in Greencastle would be forgiven for thinking there had been a full-blown air and sea rescue mission in Lough Foyle last week.
The Coast Guard helicopter was seen roaring overhead before coming to a hovering stop over a small fishing boat not far from the harbour. The helicopter hovered over the vessel for nearly ten minutes before the boat and its crew happily steamed away.
Malin Head Coast Guard Station watch officer, Dara O'Malley Daly, said the manoeuvre was all part of a training exercise for student seafarers.
The Sligo Coast Guard search and rescue helicopter leaves Greencastle after a training exercise with students from the local fisheries college. "It was a safety exercise between the Irish Coast Guard helicopter from Sligo and trainees from the National Fisheries College in Greencastle who were on board their boat 'Lough Swilly'," he said.
"These safety training exercises are designed to
help trainees learn what to do if there is an accident on board a vessel or if a boat and its crew get into difficulty out at sea."
The exercise included a rescue drill and mock winching to safety of a crewman from the 'Lough Swilly'. Mr O’Malley Daly also said the importance of wearing lifejackets at sea had to be continually stressed. “We go around the schools giving sea safety talks and we always emphasise the importance of wearing lifejackets. The more young people hear that message, the more likely they are to remember it when they go out to sea,” he added.
The BIM National Fisheries College is located in the centre of Greencastle. It is a state-of-the art training centre for people seeking careers in commercial fishing, on merchant ships and in the processing and aquaculture industries.
As well as its fishing vessel, the college is fitted with a simulated bridge deck, engineering and aquaculture training facilities, a reference library and study area.
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