Vincenzo
New Member
Please excuse my ignorance, however when a boat is assessed in Yachting Monthly, in regards to High Latitude Adventure. What would make this good and bad that is different to offshore passage making, apart from been warm !
apart from been warm !
Please excuse my ignorance, however when a boat is assessed in Yachting Monthly, in regards to High Latitude Adventure. What would make this good and bad that is different to offshore passage making, apart from been warm !
Very few production boats of the type that are reviewed in YM are specifically built for high latitude work. However as Kelpie says there are some features that custom built boats for that use tend to feature, or are seen as desirable.Please excuse my ignorance, however when a boat is assessed in Yachting Monthly, in regards to High Latitude Adventure. What would make this good and bad that is different to offshore passage making, apart from been warm !
Please excuse my ignorance, however when a boat is assessed in Yachting Monthly, in regards to High Latitude Adventure. What would make this good and bad that is different to offshore passage making, apart from been warm !
Yes,
I need to preface this by mentioning prior to Australia I worked in HK (so decades of warm water sailing) - we were in Patagonia in 2017 and it was quite an eye opener to see chimneys as standard equipment (presumably all with stoves down below - so not simply ventilation) on yachts, including one registered in Malta. Other features included huge banks (mostly reels) of shore lines and twin bow rollers (even on small yachts, in the 30'/40' range). Notably shore line are effectively used in every anchorage. Strangely(?) NG anchor were not that common.
I have never understood 'high latitude' to be restricted to waters containing ice - unless of course Patagonia is excluded from 'high latitude' - in which case Frank's knowledge might not be relevant (and I think his knowledge would be relevant).
Jonathan
......how weird our British Climate is...
PS...... I'd use 50 degrees N or S as a good rule of thumb. The Arctic and Antarctic are usually considered to be the areas poleward of the 60 degrees line
Well, EXCEPT in Western Europe, most waters north of 50 degrees N or south of 50 degrees S will be prone to ice. IF you want to consider how weird our British Climate is, have a look at the climate of most places at the same latitude - glaciers and sea ice in winter are usual, and most places at Norwegian latitudes are pretty much uninhabitable! Britain and Norway are amazingly warm for their latitude.
This map, showing permanently frozen ground, indicates just how peculiar our British Climate is: https://ipa.arcticportal.org/products/gtn-p/ipa-permafrost-map. Almost everywhere at our latitude is permanently frozen!
PS, there isn't a definition of "High Latitude", but I'd use 50 degrees N or S as a good rule of thumb. The Arctic and Antarctic are usually considered to be the areas poleward of the 60 degrees line - though a bit of Greenland (which is definitely Arctic!) pokes south of 60 N.
It always amazes me how few people actually know this.
I sailed to Haifax last year and most people with whom I talked about it, needed to be shown a map before they believed it was more southerly than the North Spanish coast. People’s idea of Canada (at least here in Europe) is somewhere up North where it is cold and dark
Almost all the UK is north of the 50°N Parallel of Latitude - except for a couple of miles of The Lizard peninsula.
Almost all of the Shetland Isles are north of 60°N Parallel of Latitude - except for a couple of miles at the bottom of Main Island.
Perhaps that's why some of the Cornish are so frosty! And, by rights there should be pack ice and polar bears around Lerwick - and some years there probably are!