Jay Ottinger reads: FREAK OF NAVIGATION
Jay Ottinger
Sea Level, N.C., July 28, 1998
'The night was warm and inviting,
and the stars shone in all their tropical brilliance. Captain John D.S. Phillips
was in a dark corner of the bridge, quietly pulling on a cigar with all the contentment
that comes to a sailor when he knows that the voyage is half completed. His ship, the passenger
steamer SS Warrimoo, was quietly knifing her way through the waters of the mid-Pacific
on her way from Vancouver to Australia. The navigator had just finished working out a star fix and brought Captain Phillips the results. The Warrimoo's position
was spotted at about Latitude 0 -30' North and Longitude 179 -30 West. The date was
December 30, 1899. First Mate Dalydon broke in, 'Captain, do you know wat this means?
We're only a few miles from the intersection of the Equator and the International Date-line.'
Captain Phillips knew exactly what it meant, and he was prankish enough to take full
advantage of the opportunity for achieving the navigation freak of a lifetime. In an ordinary crossing of the date line it is confusing enough for the passengers
because they lose a day, but the possibilities he had before him were sure to confound
them for the rest of their lives. The Captain immediately called four more navigators
to the bridge to check and double check the ship's position every few minutes. He changed
course slightly so as to bear directly on his mark. Then he carefully adjusted engine
speed so that he would strike it at just the right moment. The calm weather, the
clear night and the eager coope-ration of his entire crew worked succesfully in his
favor. At precisely midnight, local time, the Warrimoo lay exactly on the Equator
at exactly the point where it crosses the International Date Line! The consequences
of this bizarre position were many. The forward part of the ship was in the southern hemispere
and in the middle of summer. The stern was in the northern hemishere and in the middle
of winter. The date in the after part of the ship was December 30, 1899. Forward, it was January 1, 1900. The ship was therefore not only in two different days, two
different months, two different seasons, and two different years, but in two centuries,
all at the same time! Moreover, the passengers were cheated out of a New Year's Eve celebration, and one entire day. December 31,1899, disappeared from their lives for
all time. There were compensations, however, for the people aboard the Warrimoo were
undoubtedly the first to greet the new century. And Captain Phillips, speaking of
the event many years later, said: 'I never heard of it happening before, and I guess it
won't happen again until the year 2000!'