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Coast Guard buoy to help with patrols
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
During the middle of last December,
a U.S. Coast Guard mooring buoy was installed in Filucy
Bay. According to Ltd. Fred Seaton of the U.S. Coast
Guard’s 13th District headquarters in Seattle, the buoy
was placed to provide a sheltered layover for cutters
patrolling Puget Sound waters.

The U.S.Coast Guard
buoy in Filucy Bay is one of
nine in the Puget Sound region.
Photo courtesy Robin Gould |
Petty Officer Brian Day, a member
of the USCG cutter “Henry Blake,” the vessel that placed
the buoy, said it is the most-southern mooring tie-off
for vessels making the long trip from northern waters
down to Olympia. Filucy Bay was chosen specifically
because it is a protected body of water, and when used
by a Coast Guard vessel, will make it possible for the
crew to rest, and resume patrols, maintenance of public
aids-to-navigation buoys and markers, or search and
rescue operations on a following day without having to
return to their port of origin first.
Seaton and Day confirmed the buoy
could be used as a tie-up for homeland security
purposes, or during law enforcement operations, although
they both also stressed its primary purpose is simply to
provide ease of operation for both vessel and crew.
In addition to this one, eight
other USCG mooring buoys are currently established in
Puget Sound (including two installed after Sept. 11,
2001), and provide more staying power than an anchor for
either the 110-foot, 16 crew member cutters, or the
smaller 87-foot, 10-crew member vessels patrolling
inland waters. Seaton said the buoy is clearly marked
“USCG” and is not a tie-off for public vessels of any
kind, at any time.
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