colhel
Well-Known Member
Maybe we could start a slowest crossing comp. with suitable recognition at the dinner.
No cheating though... I know you, you'd go via Spain if there was a chance of a free drink
Maybe we could start a slowest crossing comp. with suitable recognition at the dinner.
Maybe we could start a slowest crossing comp. with suitable recognition at the dinner.
Hi
Can you add 'Hanser' 28ft Hillyard - Skipper + 1 possible crew member (will confirm)
X Channel first timer looking to 'buddy up' with any other boats from around Poole.
Thanks for organising!
Good to met Angele and crew last weekend (we were practising our alcohol consumption so assume we spoke the usual rubbish!) but Angele called the return journey better than I did by leaving Saturday. We left on Sunday and returned in fog for most of journey with about 300m visibility. In about 60 channel crossings it was my first time in fog relying completely on RADAR and pleased that we did not need to deviate course once. Was surprised though when 3 MoBo's closely following each other coming the other way passed us about 200m away but did not show up on RADAR. Every journey sailing can be a learning curve!
It was really good to see you and your crew again. And you were all surprisingly coherent. Either you hadn't yet had enough drinking time when we saw you or those years of practice pretending to work after a boozy lunch have paid off.
Well, even Saturday wasn't entirely fog free. We had it for about 2.5 hours - from halfway through the eastbound shipping "lane", until shortly after entering the wesbound one. Indeed, on approaching the westbound one, RADAR told me I had seven ships on my starboard bow between 2 and 8 miles distant. Some would pass ahead, some astern ...... probably. :nonchalance:
I was just about to put in a 90 deg turn when we emerged from the fog bank and suddenly they all came into view. Collision avoidance is soooooo easier when you can see the orientation of the other vessel.
For those of us that don't have radar, i.e. me, this is extremely scary! Maybe for those that do too, but how does one deal with this sort of situation without radar/AIS?
For those of us that don't have radar, i.e. me, this is extremely scary! Maybe for those that do too, but how does one deal with this sort of situation without radar/AIS?
For those of us that don't have radar, i.e. me, this is extremely scary! Maybe for those that do too, but how does one deal with this sort of situation without radar/AIS?
Purchase a decent radar reflector (some such as the Tri-Lens are much better than others), don't go if fog is forecast, if you get caught by it in a shipping lane always let the Coastguard know of the situation and it can put out a safety bulletin...
....and finally consider purchasing at least one or the other. Take a look on the For sale Forum here as this kind of gear often comes up.
My plan is to find someone with Radar and follow them!
Sorry! Didn't mean to scare you.
Wise advice from Dom and Potato navigator.
I don't have any statistics to back up my gut feel (perhaps there are some on the internet somewhere), but IMO sea fog tends to be more common in the English Channel in Spring and early Summer than it does in September. I was caught out by fog a couple of years ago when going on the Cherbourg rally, but that was because we were in Netwown (IoW) and it was the stuff that develops in estuaries on chilly autumnal nights.
No worries!
Yes, all good advice here, will be preparing for the off very carefully, and very much looking forward to it and meeting everyone![]()
For those of us that don't have radar, i.e. me, this is extremely scary! Maybe for those that do too, but how does one deal with this sort of situation without radar/AIS?
Firstly, if you're any where near the Casquettes separation zone, you may well find yourself out of radio range. Last year I was unable to raise Jersey, Guernsey, Solent or Joberg when there.