New weather buoy at Hinchinbrook Entrance thanks to Coast Guard, NOAA partnership

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U.S. Coast Guard 17th District Alaska
Contact: 17th District Public Affairs
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New weather buoy at Hinchinbrook Entrance thanks to Coast Guard, NOAA partnership

Chief Warrant Officer Jeffrey Ritter, 1st Lt. aboard Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore, supervises the launch of a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association weather buoy near the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound in Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. The buoy will be used to record and transmit weather data. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Nate Littlejohn.

Petty Officer 2nd Class Christopher Mendez Lopez, crane operator aboard Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore, gives the signal that he is ready for a buoy launching operation at the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound in Alaska, December 6, 2018. The operation was postponed due to weather, but completed Dec. 10, 2018. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Nate Littlejohn.

Billy Beach, a field service electronics technician for Pacific Architectural Engineers, contracted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, fine tunes a light on top of a NOAA weather buoy aboard Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore, Dec. 6, 2018. The crew aboard Sycamore launched the buoy at the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound in Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Nate Littlejohn.

Editors' Note: Click on images to download high resolution version.

By PA1 Nate Littlejohn

Smashing through 15-foot swells on a dark December morning, the crew aboard U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore steamed toward the Hinchinbrook Entrance in Prince William Sound, Alaska. Their attempts to launch a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weather buoy days earlier had been called off due to rough seas. With only fleeting windows of favorable conditions in the forecast, the requisite tenacity of the crew would be called upon again today.

Aboard with the Sycamore’s crew were two NOAA contractors and Coast Guard Chief Warrant Officer Daniel Delaet from the NOAA National Data Buoy Center in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. Delaet is one of four Coast Guard warrant officers at NDBC with extensive buoy tending and navigational aid experience. His job is to work with NOAA contractors and Coast Guard crews to assist with the deployment and servicing of NOAA weather buoys and towers.

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weather buoy rests on the buoy deck of Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore near Valdez, Alaska, Dec. 9, 2018. The Sycamore is a 225-foot seagoing buoy tender whose crew launched the buoy at the Hinchinbrook Entrance in Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. U.S. Coast Guard photo by PA1 Nate Littlejohn

The USCG and NOAA have been working together under a memo of understanding since 1972 at the NDBC. These days a Coast Guard liaison officer there supervises four warrant officers, including Delaet. The liaison officer coordinates with Coast Guard district waterways personnel to arrange for Coast Guard asset and crew support to maintain 106 weather buoys and 45 Coastal Marine Automated Network stations all over the U.S.

Today it was the Sycamore’s turn.

“Planning and executing a NOAA weather buoy mission like this one in Alaska is unique,” said Chad Pool, current Coast Guard liaison at NDBC. "In this instance, the buoy, mooring and equipment had to be shipped from Mississippi eight weeks in advance in order to arrive in Cordova and be placed on the Sycamore in time for their patrol. Delaet and our NOAA contracted technicians played a big role in getting it all up there.”

But a buoy onboard and an experienced crew underway isn’t all it takes in Alaska.

“When we get underway to launch or repair a buoy, it’s never a guarantee that we’ll be able to complete the mission on that trip, unless we get cooperation from Mother Nature,” said Chief Warrant Officer Jeffrey Ritter, 1st Lt. aboard the Sycamore. "But weather is what brings us on NOAA missions in the first place, whether we’re launching a buoy that will record it or fixing a buoy that was damaged by an 80-foot swell.”

Personnel at the NOAA Weather Forecast Office in Anchorage provided daily weather briefs to the captain of the Sycamore to help determine potential weather windows for the operation.

On December 10, the seas subsided just long enough for the cooperative effort aboard Sycamore to launch NOAA weather buoy 46061. Like most 3-meter weather buoys of its kind, it will record and transmit air and ocean temperature, humidity, barometric pressure and wind speed, along with wave frequency, height and direction.Petty Officer 2nd Class Christopher Mendez Lopez (right), crane operator aboard Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore, follows the instruction of Petty Officer 1st Class Jason Todd (left) in hoisting a weather buoy prior to launching it at the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound in Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration buoy will transmit weather data. U.S. Coast Guard photo by PA1 Nate Littlejohn

"Like all NOAA weather buoys, this one is extremely important in providing a clear picture of weather and sea conditions to the maritime community,” said Cmdr. Michael Franklin, Captain of the Port, Prince William Sound. “This buoy is crucial to all classes of vessels entering Prince William Sound, including recreational vessels, commercial, charter and sport fishing vessels, ferries, sightseeing vessels, cruise ships, tug and barge and oil tankers to name a few."

“Supporting NOAA by deploying these buoys is immensely important,” said Cmdr. Collin Bronson, commanding officer aboard cutter Sycamore. “Putting weather buoys in the water is one of my favorite missions, because the outcome has an impact on every facet of the maritime community. The buoys transmit the weather conditions and sea state of a given area and help to forecast much larger areas by providing a piece of the bigger weather picture. Commerce, military readiness, search and rescue, weather and climate research, even recreation; these data buoys are vital to all maritime stakeholders."

But NOAA data buoys are vital to more than just mariners. Alaska is warming faster than any other state, according to the Fourth National Climate Assessment report released Nov. 23, 2018. Studying data collected by weather buoys is crucial to understanding these changes and what they mean for Alaskans.

For more information about NDBC and NOAA, please visit: https://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/

The crew of Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore is underway near Cordova, Alaska, Dec. 12, 2018. The crew was preparing a small boat transfer to shore for contractors after completeing a buoy launching mission near the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Nate Littlejohn.

Chance Palmer, offshore weather mechanic for Pacific Architechtural Engineers, contracted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, welds a mooring shackle for a NOAA weather buoy aboard Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore, Dec. 10, 2018. The crew aboard the Sycamore launched the buoy at the Hinchinbrook Entrance in Alaska. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Nate Littlejohn.

Chief Warrant Officer Jeffrey Ritter, 1st Lt. aboard Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore, supervises his crew after the launch of a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association weather buoy near the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound in Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. The buoy will record and transmit weather data. U.S. Coast Guard photo by PA1 Nate Littlejohn

The crew on the buoy deck of Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore prepares to hoist and launch a weather buoy near the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound, Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. The Sycamore is a 225-foot seagoing buoy tender out of Cordova, Alaska. U.S. Coast Guard photo by PA1 Nate Littlejohn

Chief Warrant Officer Daniel Delaet, a Coast Guard representative from the National Data Buoy Center in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, prepares to help supervise the launch of a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weather buoy from the deck of Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore at the Hinchinbrook Entrance in Alaska, Dec. 6, 2018. Delaet works with NOAA contractors and Coast Guardsmen to make sure NOAA weather buoys are launched properly. U.S. Coast Guard photo by PA1 Nate Littlejohn

The crew on the buoy deck of Coast Guard Cutter Sycamore prepares to hoist the anchor of a weather buoy near the Hinchinbrook Entrance to Prince William Sound, Alaska, Dec. 10, 2018. The Sycamore is a 225-foot seagoing buoy tender out of Cordova, Alaska. U.S. Coast Guard photo by PA1 Nate Littlejohn

 

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