Athene V30
Well-Known Member
My little plan 'should' come to fruition sooner than that :encouragement:
Well i've decided that im going to fly over for a pint now you've put me off the route
Its a bit different to chartering in Greece Croatia and the Canary Islands. The channel is so full of navigational avoidances. The Colregs states that cross shipping channels at right angles as reasonable practicable, I think 130 from LSH looks a lot less a mess about option. I may head slight further down the channel before crossing but not to the point so it is a right angles. If there are no vessels to be seen when I get to LSH it will be a 130 cross. By that time the tide will be with me anyway. The chances of getting run down will be low if I maintain a watch during this period. If I lights on the horizon I will check its speed and course on AIS and make a calculation to determine a possible confliction but If truth be known if it is a vessel of any size then it will be out of the way in not much time at all.
Don't worry too much about ships. Much of the avoidance is just common sense. AIS is brilliant, but it is often quite simple to judge a ship's heading by eye, and it is an essential skill to acquire. There is something beautiful about a ship's lights gliding by, followed by the distant(?) throb of its engines and later the whiff of its exhaust. It's part of the romance of the sea that hasn't changed much since the time of Conrad.Well i've decided that im going to fly over for a pint now you've put me off the route
Its a bit different to chartering in Greece Croatia and the Canary Islands. The channel is so full of navigational avoidances. The Colregs states that cross shipping channels at right angles as reasonable practicable, I think 130 from LSH looks a lot less a mess about option. I may head slight further down the channel before crossing but not to the point so it is a right angles. If there are no vessels to be seen when I get to LSH it will be a 130 cross. By that time the tide will be with me anyway. The chances of getting run down will be low if I maintain a watch during this period. If I lights on the horizon I will check its speed and course on AIS and make a calculation to determine a possible confliction but If truth be known if it is a vessel of any size then it will be out of the way in not much time at all.
Also one`s first foreign landfall having navigated one`s own ship there. Nothing like the first timeDon't worry too much about ships. Much of the avoidance is just common sense. AIS is brilliant, but it is often quite simple to judge a ship's heading by eye, and it is an essential skill to acquire. There is something beautiful about a ship's lights gliding by, followed by the distant(?) throb of its engines and later the whiff of its exhaust. It's part of the romance of the sea that hasn't changed much since the time of Conrad.
Not sure where I stand on this one - I had the naval training, did it for a bit then got out. Does that mean I have a brain!
Maybe not as I would have retired on a pretty good pension by now!
There is something beautiful about a ship's lights gliding by, followed by the distant(?) throb of its engines and later the whiff of its exhaust. It's part of the romance of the sea that hasn't changed much since the time of Conrad.
French was itNot wishing to raise a 'non ECF' like note of discord, but we were downwind of a Dover-Calais ferry a few summers back and there was nothing whatsoever romantic about the smell from the air con and exhaust: nothing at all. A mixture of diesel fumes and unwashed bodies. Quite put us off the lovely day.
Maybe I got a bit carried away; that's what winter does to me. On the other hand, they probably said the same thing about the smoke from the old coal-powered ships. Our descendants will probably wax romantic about alpha particles.Not wishing to raise a 'non ECF' like note of discord, but we were downwind of a Dover-Calais ferry a few summers back and there was nothing whatsoever romantic about the smell from the air con and exhaust: nothing at all. A mixture of diesel fumes and unwashed bodies. Quite put us off the lovely day.
We find that it's the gas and crude carriers that really stink!Not wishing to raise a 'non ECF' like note of discord, but we were downwind of a Dover-Calais ferry a few summers back and there was nothing whatsoever romantic about the smell from the air con and exhaust: nothing at all. A mixture of diesel fumes and unwashed bodies. Quite put us off the lovely day.
We find that it's the gas and crude carriers that really stink!
We find that it's the gas and crude carriers that really stink!
Slightly off threqd..
Sitting on the terrace of the Royal Tample on a summer afternoon, you could see a sickley smear of yellow across the Chanel.