Our inflatables might not be our biggest boats but they are often our most effective tools at sea.
These zippy vessels are great for getting in between a whale and a
harpoon, stopping toxic waste being dumped at sea and confronting
illegal fishing vessels in action. Inflatables are so good, we have
been using them for over 25 years.
Technically,
our inflatables are called Rigid Inflatable Boats. To our crew
who drive them they are just inflatables or to many people 'Greenpeace
in their rubber boats'.
Inflatables are incredibly safe
and far more sophisticated than they appear. Though they come in a
variety of sizes and configurations, they all have a few things in
common:
below the water is a hard fibreglass or aluminium hull that allows the boat to travel at high speeds through rough seas.
A
specially constructed rubber tube runs along the bow and sides of the
hull to provide the boat with exceptional buoyancy and stability in the
water.
A powerful engine makes the boat fast and manoeuvrable.
The
inspiration for their use came from an unusual source. During the 1972
voyage of the Greenpeace yacht Vega against French nuclear testing,
French commandos used inflatables to board the Vega and badly beat the
skipper, David McTaggart.
The effectiveness of the commando's
boats was not lost on our tactical mastermind at the time, Bob Hunter.
If they were effective for the French commandos surely Greenpeace could
put them to good use.
A couple of years later, the inflatables
were in action challenging the Soviet whaling fleet and protecting
whales from explosive harpoons, as they are still doing today.
Many
inflatables have come and gone over the years, had barrels of
radioactive waste dropped on them, been squashed by ships transporting
illegal timber, impounded by police or just plain worn out. But all the
inflatables on board our ships have names. Some mundanely named after
their colour or manufacturer. But some are more imaginatively named
such as the African Queen.