In the log of 22nd April,
Peter posed the question when is the dog watch,is it the one that finishes
just before dawn. Why is it called the dog watch, is it something to do with
the dog star visible in the northern latitudes?
Below are the responses that he
received:
(1) A shortened watch period.
Generally, two two-hour watches, designated First and Second (or First and
Last, RCN), arranged so that personnel on watch can eat the evening meal.
Usually 16:00 to 18:00, and 18:00 to 20:00. Also serves to al ternate the daily
watch routine so sailors with the midwatch one night will not have it the next
time. Origin of term unclear.
(2) (RCN) An unpopular watch, usually the 2400-0400 or 0400-0800.
All of them say that the
derivation is unclear, but if you believe Patrick O'Brian it was called the dog
watch because it is 'cur'-tailed!
From the Columbia
Encylclopedia:
Having 6x4-hour watches in
the day meant that the same men were standiing the same watch every day, so the
4 pm to 8 pm watch was divided into two, the first dog-watch and the second
dog-watch (in the RN 1st and last dog-watches), giving 7 watches and meaning
that people gradually rotated through the watches. "Dog" is a
corruption of "dodge", because they dodged the same routine.
The dog watch was the last
watch before dawn, It was the shortest, according to Dr Maturin in the Patrick
O'Brien books, it was because it was curtailed
Watch on Board Ship There are
two sorts of watch- the long watch of four hours, and the dog watch of two,
from 4 to 6; but strictly speaking a watch means four hours. The dog watches*
are introduced to prevent one party always keeping watch at the same time.
12 to 4 p.m. Afternoon watch.
4 to 6 First dog-watch.
6 to 8 Second dog-watch.
8 to 12 First night watch.
12 to 4 a.m. Middle watch.
4 to 8 Morning watch.
8 to 12 Forenoon watch.
*Dog-watch A corruption of dodgewatch:
two short watches, one from four to six, and the other from six to eight in the
evening, introduced to dodge the routine, or prevent the same men always
keeping watch at the same time.
A dogwatch at sea is the
period between 4 and 6 p.m, the first dogwatch, or the period between 6 and 8
p.m., the second dog watch. The watches aboard ships are:
Noon to 4:00 p.m. Afternoon
watch
4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. First
dogwatch
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Second
dogwatch
8:00 p.m. to midnight 1st
night watch
Midnight to 4:00 a.m. Middle
watch or mid watch
4:00 to 8:00 a.m. Morning
watch
8:00 a.m. to noon Forenoon
watch
The dogwatches are only two
hours each so the same Sailors aren't always on duty at the same time each
afternoon. Some experts say dogwatch is a corruption of dodge watch and others
associate dogwatch with the fitful sleep of Sailors called dog sleep, because
it is a stressful watch. But no one really knows the origin of this term, which
was in use at least back to 1700.
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