eNavigation

That’s right, and your VHF set needs to be reprogrammed, but in practical terms I haven’t noticed any difference so far.
The main issue is that in Benelux and Germany, Ch31 is the new marina channel away from the VDES data channels, but in the UK 31 is not on a normal ship's licence, it's reserved for the RNLI. So a UK vessel needs a Notice of Variation before they can have Ch 31 added and can't have it accessible in UK waters.
 
Do you know who’s on whatever committee exists? Are they all men? Are they all old? I’d be surprised by both. However most of the people who complain about the RYA not doing what they think it should are old men!
I would have thought that most of the people who work for the RYA are of normal working age, and as you say, probably a lot younger than a significant number of us forumites
 
Nonsense. On that specific thread you brought it up hoping to catch me out.
No I didn’t st599 did.
It didn’t work so you kept digging and twisting and that hasn’t worked either, you’ve just ended up looking like an argumentative fool.
SOLAS V requires undertaking a passage plan using relevant publications - would this not require charts?
Which Luckyduck and RunAgroundHard clarified its geographic scope:
As a parochial example those regulations don’t apply in the Solent and are advisory only instead
Only when "preceding to sea" which has a very definite meaning: outside of categorised waters. Where I sail, the Firth of Clyde and West Coast of Scotland, the categorised waters, especially in the Firth of Clyde, summer month limits, is quite a large body of water.
With RAH using the technically correct description of “to sea” and “categorised waters”
`You are correct though, if sailing outside these limits, then "appropriate nautical charts" are required to be consulted.
I’m not trying to catch you out at all - you just seem to be confused about your legal obligations. Of course that leads to the ambiguous question of what “appropriate” means - the sort of question that we might turn to our national governing body to help determine?
you’ve just ended up looking like an argumentative fool.
I won’t stoop to making personal insults - but I will continue to point out when I believe you are wrong, because when I see something that seems misleading I think it’s right to go to the source and correct it - which is what I would have done had I had the concern you presented in the OP.
 
Of course that leads to the ambiguous question of what “appropriate” means - the sort of question that we might turn to our national governing body to help determine?
You probably would, you seem to lack the ability to think critically. Most people in charge of a vessel would mange just fine though.
I’m not confused about my obligations at all. I was the one who clarified that passage plans aren’t strict, paper based, or onerous. Keep digging though, you’re doing really well 😉
 
I was the one who clarified that passage plans aren’t strict, paper based, or onerous. Keep digging though, you’re doing really well 😉

You did (as did virtually everyone else) but yet you doubled down insisting you don’t make plans and weren’t required to. You also stated in the same post (#26) you didn’t need to consult publications despite the MCA saying “For small vessels and pleasure-craft the degree of voyage planning will depend upon the size of vessel, its crew and the length of the voyage. The MCA expects all mariners to make a careful assessment of any proposed voyage, considering all dangers to navigation, weather forecasts, tidal predictions and other relevant factors including the competence of the crew using appropriate charts and publications.

@Ceirwan was right in post 12 - you are more interested in moving the goal posts “to be right” than actually understanding why the RYA made the post or what the underlying issues are. Your rant just feeds the anti-RYA rhetoric on here, ironically amongst the demographic (old grandads who like to talk about how sailing used to be!) you say are the problem - when the RYA are probably the best hope for anything resembling common sense on how rules are applied to small sailing vessels!
 
insisting you don’t make plans and weren’t required to.
Why does it matter so much to you that I don’t make firm plans? You seem way too invested in my boating activities. No, I don’t make plans for every use of my boat. Yes, sometimes I do just pootle about. No, the authorities are not knocking down my door and neither have I had a major incident.

Let it go, you’re not achieving anything here. If anything you’re reinforcing my original point.
 
Why does it matter so much to you that I don’t make firm plans?
Who said anything about “firm” - once again you are twisting the “goal posts”. Although the vaguer the plans potentially the more reason to have appropriate navigation information available!

Contrary to your belief, the RYA have been bashing a “you can trust sailors to use common sense, and even if they don’t write it down they have a plan” drum for decades. But the more people who insist that they make no plans and you can’t regulate sailors like that - I’d say the more chance that regulators try to! Isn’t it better that the RYA work with those regulators to establish workable solutions than either commercial interests or an MCA staffed with lots of ex-professional mariners makes the rules for us?

Wouldn’t Garmin be delighted if every vessel going to sea required to be equipped with a system connected to the internet and getting automatic updates, or which had automatic routing available?
You seem way too invested in my boating activities.
you broadcast your boating activities on the internet; if you don’t want people to discuss them don’t tell us.
No, I don’t make plans for every use of my boat. Yes, sometimes I do just pootle about.
i don’t really believe that - when you slip the dock you presumably have a thought of where you are going to pootle about, how deep the water is, what the weather is doing and if there’s any hazards to be aware of? You presumably have some notion of how long you might be out for and whether you are coming back to your starting point (and any tidal restrictions on that) or if you might go somewhere else. A plan can have options. A plan can change. At some point, you have presumably considered a chart of the area - even if that was so long ago and so familiar you have it embedded in your mind? How would you know if there were significant changes? Given you sail mostly with your wife/partner, do you not discuss the “plan” or is she just a passenger?
No, the authorities are not knocking down my door and neither have I had a major incident.
Good, I hope you don’t. As you’ll be well aware they don’t tend to pay any interest until something goes really badly wrong - but then they increasingly don’t say “sometimes shit happens at sea” they say “someone must be criminally responsible”. All the more so for commercial craft. The RYA have doubtless played a key role in ensuring that unlike many countries the regulatory involvement for people like you and me is light touch. They also seem to be relatively good at mitigating regulatory encroachment into sailing schools, charter operators etc.
Let it go, you’re not achieving anything here. If anything you’re reinforcing my original point.
If your original point was that you don’t understand how sailing is (light touch) regulated in the UK or the RYA’s role in that - then I think I am!
 
Whether it’s sole or not they’re talking like it’s the 1990’s and it’s new. The linked article even starts with “The way we navigate is set to change.”. My point was that for most people that happened 20 years ago and we now just call it Navigation.

The RYA has a way of speaking like your grandad explaining the Internet, it’s embarrassing and they need to get some fresh blood on this stuff. How can we support an organisation that comes across as so completely out of touch?

You seem to forget that new sailors are starting from scratch, knowing nowt about navigation so need educating, usually on RYA courses, starting from basics. What you personally have done for the last 20 years is irrelevant.

Your assumption (in other replies) that everyone does it electronically is also incorrect, many of us still use and enjoy using paper charts, much the same as enjoying a proper book rather than a Kindle.

Having had various instruments fail at different time over the years, plotter, radar, gps etc. I consider charts to be a sensible backup, particularly if heading into unfamiliar territory.
 
particularly if heading into unfamiliar territory.
We find it impossible to keep enough paper charts on board for unfamiliar territory both from a space and expense perspective.

I didn’t assume everyone uses electronics, just that a majority now do and have no issues. There isn’t a lack of understanding how to use electronics.
As I understand it (and having recently re-done the nav course) the RYA already do teach electronics so aside from addressing the holdouts there’s no real gap to fill here.

Frankly I don’t see many of the holdouts changing regardless of any RYA action. They’ll just use ever more outdated paper charts while claiming the rocks don’t move (ignoring that new ones are often identified). And that’s a reasonable choice as far as I’m concerned, each to their own.
More likely, and more aligned to the topic, is that paper will cease being an acceptable means of navigation in the regs and commercial/coded boats will be forced to change within x years. Same for pre-DSC radios which with VDES coming along will be banned to avoid interference.
 
We find it impossible to keep enough paper charts on board for unfamiliar territory both from a space and expense perspective.

I didn’t assume everyone uses electronics, just that a majority now do and have no issues. There isn’t a lack of understanding how to use electronics.
As I understand it (and having recently re-done the nav course) the RYA already do teach electronics so aside from addressing the holdouts there’s no real gap to fill here.

Frankly I don’t see many of the holdouts changing regardless of any RYA action. They’ll just use ever more outdated paper charts while claiming the rocks don’t move (ignoring that new ones are often identified). And that’s a reasonable choice as far as I’m concerned, each to their own.
More likely, and more aligned to the topic, is that paper will cease being an acceptable means of navigation in the regs and commercial/coded boats will be forced to change within x years. Same for pre-DSC radios which with VDES coming along will be banned to avoid interference.

For anyone starting from scratch on an RYA course, it's most likely they have no understanding of electronic (or paper) navigation at sea.

Again an assumption. Updated charts are still available and I bought new a couple of seasons ago. covering our usual sailing area Algarve to western Med. Incidentally, we have to carry charts under local rules.
 
Yes paper is still available right now, but it’s rapidly disappearing and in the UK was almost withdrawn. The only reason it wasn’t in the end was these very rules to carry paper. I was obviously talking about when it is withdrawn over the next few years.
 
We find it impossible to keep enough paper charts on board for unfamiliar territory both from a space and expense perspective.
How did people manage in the days before plotters on far smaller boats than yours?
I didn’t assume everyone uses electronics, just that a majority now do and have no issues.
you can maybe see why people thought you did when you said:
We’re all navigating using well proven tools.
My impression when I last did any serious boat shopping was there were still quite a lot of older boats around without a chart plotter, or with a chart plotter which can't have been updated in the last 10 yrs because the charts are not available.
There isn’t a lack of understanding how to use electronics.
Are you sure? The user experience between say Navionics and OpenCPN is very different. Does the "sat nav generation" understand how to set up Navionics (etc) to safely autoroute? The difference between using an "old" plotter and a touch screen are quite different. Orca is an interesting competitor to Navionics which adds tidal calculations to your plans - would it be obvious to someone who's never done it by "hand"? I think Savvy Navvy does too - but no idea if it gets it right. At the other end of the scale Memory Maps is pretty basic - is it good enough.
As I understand it (and having recently re-done the nav course) the RYA already do teach electronics so aside from addressing the holdouts there’s no real gap to fill here.
Which systems did they teach with? How do they (or the instructor) view autorouting?
Frankly I don’t see many of the holdouts changing regardless of any RYA action. They’ll just use ever more outdated paper charts while claiming the rocks don’t move (ignoring that new ones are often identified). And that’s a reasonable choice as far as I’m concerned, each to their own.
I use both - not because I'm a "hold out" but because I find a large chart far nicer for big picture planning on and an electronic plotter simpler for execution.
Yes paper is still available right now, but it’s rapidly disappearing and in the UK was almost withdrawn. The only reason it wasn’t in the end was these very rules to carry paper. I was obviously talking about when it is withdrawn over the next few years.
So is it not appropriate for the RYA to discuss what a "paperless" navigation world would look like? Contingencies/backups, what the minimum acceptable screen size is, how often the electronics need updated etc. And as someone pointed out a few pages ago - which elements/symbols must be displayed, which data sources should be considered trustworthy enough etc.

Lots of people using tablets (or phones) for routine nav now, and they have advantages and disadvantages over dedicated plotters. I think there is a legitimate debate to be had on their role in small commercial vessel navigation.
 
Lots of people using tablets (or phones) for routine nav now, and they have advantages and disadvantages over dedicated plotters. I think there is a legitimate debate to be had on their role in small commercial vessel navigation.
There has been lots of debate, so much so we have working products and practices that have been in use for decades. Those that decided not to participate may be upset by that, but we are where we are. They’re free to have their own little committee meetings and discuss, but it won’t change a lot.
 
There has been lots of debate, so much so we have working products and practices that have been in use for decades.
Decades is a slight exaggeration - Navionics Boating app was launched less than 12 years ago, Savvy Navvy less than 9. The iPad itself and even iOS and Android smartphones are less than 2 decades old. There has been growing acceptance of their use in the leisure market (I use a waterproof Android tablet as my main in cockpit navigation), but I don't see them being used on commercial vessels.
Those that decided not to participate may be upset by that, but we are where we are.
I'm not aware of any serious "debate" on their use on commercial vessels? What was the conclusion? I ask because despite their obvious utiity the MCA have some quite strong words about the risk of distraction from the use of mobile phones on the bridge of ships and I think that is a reasonable concern.
They’re free to have their own little committee meetings and discuss, but it won’t change a lot.
But it will make you irate if anyone with any sort of official-type role gets involved.
 
Decades is a slight exaggeration - Navionics Boating app was launched less than 12 years ago, Savvy Navvy less than 9. The iPad itself and even iOS and Android smartphones are less than 2 decades old. There has been growing acceptance of their use in the leisure market (I use a waterproof Android tablet as my main in cockpit navigation), but I don't see them being used on commercial vessels.
Commercial vessels use ECDIS, not apps.
 
Commercial vessels use ECDIS, not apps.
I know! That’s kind of the whole point of the thread! Small commercial vessels currently don’t use ECDIS because it’s too complex and expensive for a charter yacht, 9m RIB, Fishing vessel, Fishfarm service vessel etc. So they have been stuck in what you might call a legacy mode of “paper” based charts being their official source of navigation. The RYA’s “digital first” stuff that riles the OP is in response to UKHO changes which are coming and will phase out printed charts. The UKHO is presenting a proposal to the IMO on an international standard for digital navigation in the small craft sector - my question is, will that be for hardware based devices or will it encompass the app based plotting which already has some traction in the leisure sector. I don’t expect anyone here to know the answer, but I would hope that the RYA might be feeding thoughts to the UKHO, who may well be less grounded in the reality of operating small vessels.
 
Who mentioned apps? You’re continually coming in with random gibberish, it’s like talking to a very bad AI.
I did in post 72 and you replied to it saying it’s been around for decades and the debate is over!

Surely if you think skippers should be left to their own devices to select the tools that work for them - then apps are “on the table” or are you saying that you have a particular set of solutions YOU have decided are good enough and everyone else should agree with - a standard perhaps!
 
Commercial vessels use ECDIS, not apps.
Many commercial/coded vessels use widely available plotters from the likes of Garmin, Navico and Raymarine. Many also have unused paper charts on board to comply with a pointless and out of date regulation. I dare say a few do use Navionics on a phone while having paper charts unused in a locker.
The reality is that commercial and coded vessels are currently using the navigation equipment and techniques appropriate to them while also having to maintain regulatory requirements which are not appropriate to them.
 
Needing paper solutions for navigation, cost too high, join the RYA: -

RYA Member Imray Discounts
Personal Members - 15% off Imray and 5% off Admiralty
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With charts coming in at £45 a pop now, for UKHO, paper is becoming expensive. There are a few new editions this year for the WCofS and that soon eats into the overheads. Of course, there are lower cost paper solutions than UKHO charts, such as Imray Chart Packs £59 - £64, pre discount prices. These and a plotter soon satisfies the coding surveyor and the Instructor needing to teach navigation.
 
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