On June 27th, four shipmates and I visited the International
Maritime University of Panama. They included EM2 Rodriguez, ET3 Delafuente,
BMSN Garcialorenzo and MC3 Pikul, who came to take photos. The students invited
us over to tour their compound and academy after we’d given them tours of the
ship for the past two days. We were picked up at 0845 by Mr. Eddie Munoz who is
a retired ENC and who works over at the academy now as the head of the cadets.
He picked us up at the front gate at Vasco Nuñez de Balboa and we headed to the
academy.
We were given a tour of the compound. It was a pretty good-sized
facility. Then they showed us their navigation simulator, which is pretty cool.
I loved it. We saw their engineering plant simulator. It wasn’t a full-hands-on
experience, but it was pretty close.
We also had a couple question-and-answer sessions with the
students there. They asked us how life was at sea because these are first year
cadets who haven’t been to a ship and most of them don’t have any sea-going
experience. They had a lot of questions about life at sea and how the food is
on a ship and how many people are on our ships; a lot of basic questions. One
of the classes we saw was a class of future engineers, so they were talking to
Petty Officer Rodriguez about what kind of engineering plant we have and what
it’s like to work as an engineer. They were also curious about the places we’ve
visited, how long we’ve been in the Navy, and some of the most fun things we’ve
done in the Navy.
We got to sit down with the director of the academy and he
told us how much he appreciated us giving his students tours of our ship so
they could see something different. He thanked us for that and wished us a good
tour around the compound.
The academy provided us lunch. It was steamed rice, lentils cooked in a
sauce, and beef chunks with a sauce that had carrots and celery in it. They
have cadets there who are going to be top-siders who are going to be kitchen
crew. They have chefs teaching them how to cook and about sanitation. They also
have a program to provide free lunch and breakfast to cadets who come from less
fortunate backgrounds.
Before we left we saw how their afternoon formation. It’s
set up like a military academy with different companies and a student
chain-of-command.
Petty Officer Delafuente used to be in an honor guard rifle
team in high school so he was able to show their rifle drill team some stuff
that he used to do. Overall it was a pretty good day. We were there for
probably five or six hours.
We recognized some of the students who’d come over to see us
on our ship and when they saw us at the academy, they greeted us and asked how
we were doing and how we liked their facility. They were very happy to show us
their side of the sea-going life. They were very proud of their academy and
very eager to show everything off.
Their simulator was a lot of fun. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It
is completely different navigating with their system than it is using ours. They
have a very minimal bridge team and it was just very different. When you see
something different like that you understand that there is more to it than just
how we navigate the seas.
I had a great time showing them around our ship and I had an
amazing time checking out their academy. If I ever had the chance to get one of
their navigational simulators, I would totally buy one. That is the coolest
thing I’ve done in a long time. It’s like a video game with five screens in
front of you, giving you a panoramic view and they had 20 different ports you
could simulate pulling into. You can choose the weather conditions and the sea
state and they had different maritime ships you could drive whether it was a
ferry, a tug, a car carrier, a grain ship. It was completely amazing. I want
one of those things for my home now.
Visiting the academy gave us a chance to see how other
countries do things. We have a set way of doing things and a lot of other
countries follow a similar model. It’s good to see how they do it and the
differences, because sometimes you might be able to take something away from
it.
V/R
BM2 Jason Funk
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