kcrane
Well-Known Member
As a newbie I've been reading navigation books so I am not completely at sea next season (pun). It may just be me, but are they all a strange mix between quite confusing (rhumb lines and great circles) and greatly simplified ("work out the course and then sail in that direction" - with me thinking, but what if the wind won't let you?).
Real question is, if you are sailing, say, to the Channel Islands from the Solent, how do you plan the journey in real life, taking into account the tides and leeway and wind direction?
Do you plan it on paper, work out the effect of tide on each leg and then come up with a single course? Or do you put a lot of closely sequenced waypoints into the plotter and let it minimise cross-track error between them, or what? Above all, what if after all of your careful planning, the wind turns out to blow from the direction of your intended course? /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
Real question is, if you are sailing, say, to the Channel Islands from the Solent, how do you plan the journey in real life, taking into account the tides and leeway and wind direction?
Do you plan it on paper, work out the effect of tide on each leg and then come up with a single course? Or do you put a lot of closely sequenced waypoints into the plotter and let it minimise cross-track error between them, or what? Above all, what if after all of your careful planning, the wind turns out to blow from the direction of your intended course? /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif