Ohlin Karcher
N/A
A very educational thread, for me at least..if anyone hasn't seen it, there is a current thread on the Jesters section about the same subject.
What time of year? Guess I've been lucky never to have been caught like that.
Beat a few hundred miles to Azores a couple of times but never from half way. Must have been...interesting!
Yes, I do feel you haven't been unlucky with transat weather, and i think I'm the same. But I know a few others who have seen stuff ... and whereas westbound I would go south and west in a (very large) bouncy castle, the return gig is more serious. My wimpy gig has been to dodge towards the rhumb line and stick the motors on. But a couple of guys I know have seen a "freight train" on the way and circled for a few days to let it go past - and Iridium with software (Maxsea? whatever... ) gave them the week-ahead forecast which yeah, not accurate but showed the warning in advance.
Very interesting thanksI recently weather routed a friend sailing from Panama to Easter Island, to Marquesas, to Hawaii to Vancouver. He has a Garmin Inreach. I enjoyed the routing. The costs are fixed at £75/ month for unlimited texts and tracking. You can turn it off for months at a time or activate for just one month. We use ours for ocean crossings on the £75/ month tariff and we use the £35/month tariff for a 3 night passage. We get 40texts for this, tracking and an emergency button if we need help.
I also routed a friend from St Martin to Portugal earlier this year. He was using a satphone. It cost him a lot more than the Inreach to get weather from me twice a day and keep in touch with his wife.
+1You can't outrun or avoid much in a small monohull so you just need to watch the barometer and sky. I have used a cheap ssb receiver and an old lap top to get weather faxes which were more useful on the way back. But still it was only a warning of what was to come rather than a way to avoid bad weather. Have a good trip.
You can't outrun or avoid much in a small monohull so you just need to watch the barometer and sky. I have used a cheap ssb receiver and an old lap top to get weather faxes which were more useful on the way back. But still it was only a warning of what was to come rather than a way to avoid bad weather. Have a good trip.
In my opinion, the question should rather be "what type of weather information I am comfortable with", rate them from best worst, and how much is the cost for each one of them, then decide.
If you feel happy with nothing, leave with nothing, it has been done and of course can be done, plus very cheap. If you believe in minimalism bring a barometer, it has been and can be done. etc etc.
Do you feel happy with someone else providing you with the info or do you like to make your own decisions/take risks? Do you want "all the available info"? If not, what exactly do you need?
There is no "right or wrong", as shown by all the contributions there are many available alternatives, all tested in many different cases; do you feel comfortable in long range sailing with gribs, with fax charts, with a simple barometer, with an indestructible boat that whispers in your ear "who cares about the weather"?![]()
We used both an Inreach and Iridium Go on a transat. The Inreach gives you a forecast based on a last/long position that you select in the request message. We found that, whilst limited to the area selected, was accurate and relatively cheap. We were sent forecasts via email on a daily basis via the Iridium Go, linked to an iPad: again limited because they only covered where we were going to be in the next few days.
I’ve sent weather messages to mates doing a Pacific crossing via Inreach. I used the PocketGrib app for the forecast, plotted their position, course and expected speed on a daily basis, using that to generate wind speed and direction, general weather and wave height forecast. Reduced to the bare essentials, that can fit into a single text message for a three day forecast.
My forecasts were reported to be optimistic as far as wind strength was concerned (they’d hoped for more wind...) but spot on for direction, general weather and waves. When it looked like there was potential for a storm system developing, I’d send a second message giving current location, pressure and heading for the storm centre, so they could make course decisions if needed. That worked well, as the tariff their Inreach was on allowed unlimited incoming messages.
Very interesting thanks
May I ask, are you a meteorologist, or just an interested and well informed yachtsman, to be passing on forecasts, did you do any interpretation of the data or just pass it to him to work out what was expected re wind and waves?
I am just a yachtsman who's done a bit. Its pretty easy to give wind, wave and current info and a course to steer with the vast amount of information available on the internet. My favourite is Windy. Turn on the lat/long in settings. Use the current, wave and wind charts. Three weather models to compare.
My pal sailing in the Pacific was single handed or double handed depending which leg of the route he was on. He has enough to do without worrying about weather. Just getting enough sleep and not having to try and interpret the info was useful to him. He really appreciated the advice. I have a group of active sailor friends so if one of us is doing a trip and wants weather info there is always somebody skilled enough to send weather info to me and vis a versa.
I have an original Delorme Inreach, used to get from uk to algarve, a knowledgeable friend on a land based computer can see where you are from your breadcrums and can use passage weather or the like to give a twice a day update. Another friend on here, I sent him daily updates as he crossed the atlantic and caribbean. Worked fine for usYou can be sure I will be logging the pressure that's a given..I was coming rapidly to the same conclusion about InReach, for my purposes, ie NBG.
Thanks, if you have time, could you detail how your knowledgeable friend formatted the twice daily uodates into a txt message? Was it sent in a pre-arranged code?I have an original Delorme Inreach, used to get from uk to algarve, a knowledgeable friend on a land based computer can see where you are from your breadcrums and can use passage weather or the like to give a twice a day update. Another friend on here, I sent him daily updates as he crossed the atlantic and caribbean. Worked fine for us
You can't outrun or avoid much in a small monohull so you just need to watch the barometer and sky. I have used a cheap ssb receiver and an old lap top to get weather faxes which were more useful on the way back. But still it was only a warning of what was to come rather than a way to avoid bad weather. I've now got a target receiver which works well and also means you can listen to nets and hear other yacht reports of their weather. Have a good trip.