Fenders
Well-Known Member
I have crossed the Channel on many occasions from the Solent to the Channel Isles and Cherbourg, etc, and always maintained a good look out and obeyed all the advise/rules that are metioned in the Pilotage books.
It has always amazed me at the number of ships that ply up and down the Channel. In a few weeks I am planning, subject to weather, to sail from the Brighton area to St.Valery, crossing the TSS at the obligatory 90 degrees from due south of Beachy Head on a heading of approx 165 degrees. It will be a daylight crossing and I will be ready to put the donkey on if necessary. Should I give Dover CG a courtesy call or just maintain a listening watch on channel 11?
I guess the further east you intend to cross must concentrate shipping into smaller confines. This must make a crossing in the eastern Channel more difficult than the central or western Channel.
Having read through books, studied charts, looked at the MCA website and read through the various threads on ybw.com can anyone offer me any further advise on this procedure or am I being over cautious?
I am a great believer in being well prepared for any eventuality. Belts and braces!!
Thanks
Fenders /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
It has always amazed me at the number of ships that ply up and down the Channel. In a few weeks I am planning, subject to weather, to sail from the Brighton area to St.Valery, crossing the TSS at the obligatory 90 degrees from due south of Beachy Head on a heading of approx 165 degrees. It will be a daylight crossing and I will be ready to put the donkey on if necessary. Should I give Dover CG a courtesy call or just maintain a listening watch on channel 11?
I guess the further east you intend to cross must concentrate shipping into smaller confines. This must make a crossing in the eastern Channel more difficult than the central or western Channel.
Having read through books, studied charts, looked at the MCA website and read through the various threads on ybw.com can anyone offer me any further advise on this procedure or am I being over cautious?
I am a great believer in being well prepared for any eventuality. Belts and braces!!
Thanks
Fenders /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif