DAKA
Well-Known Member
I am not experienced at all, still trying to learn someone suggested otherwise so I thought I best put the record straight and also find out what others did....
I sailed and won a lot of races / series in my youth but no real navigation as you just sail round marks with visual waypoints everywhere, we raced everywhere under power as well as sail which is partially why we were so successful.
I was then asked to miss sailing one weekend in order to be in the committee boat ( Race judge and jury), the committee boat was bust so I had to take the Rescue launch and that was it , I never really enjoyed sailing again and realised it was speed that interested me.
My first speed boat cost £20 (a broom) which I owned 32/64 share with one of my school mates , we sank it /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
Then took a Falcon out at hightide so I couldn't run aground, never bought a chart, just used a 5 inch to the mile OS road atlas.
I got a bigger boat and followed someone to Dover, I kept the track so we could go on our own and find our way back.
from Dover we set off to France by following the Pride of Calais, we couldn't keep up and we lost sight of it, didn't matter as I guessed another would be along soon and sure enough it was, we ended up in Boulonge but had a great weekend. Two weeks latter we went again but this time our mates we followed to Dover followed us to France and that was the start of assumptions that I knew what I was doing.
I kept the GPS when I upgraded to the next boat so we could still find France, one of my mates was selling his Garmin gps, I knew he had been to the channel Islands so I bought that extending my cruising grounds /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
And thats it really, so when I ask a question regarding Navigation, fog and collision regs they are genuine questions.
I am still unsure what to do in a TSS when you have a Ship on your port side.
I did go on a RYA vhf course but I was disappointed with the idiot who was more interested in telling how to SAIL into a marina in the dark without lights on and leave early as to avoid marina fees.
Also followed an RYA instructor to St Helier who took us through wind against tide Alderney race..........what a plonker !
Hence you can understand why I put more reliance on what I hear from experienced skippers in club bars, pontoons, here /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
I do have a passage plan chart now as it came with the boat gps and one of my mates gave me some of his old charts that I inked over some old pencil lines.................if the passage was right for him why bother to change it next time /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
MBM cruises were very easy to follow, I recommend them to newbies, very easy way to build a comprehensive Track library.
I sailed and won a lot of races / series in my youth but no real navigation as you just sail round marks with visual waypoints everywhere, we raced everywhere under power as well as sail which is partially why we were so successful.
I was then asked to miss sailing one weekend in order to be in the committee boat ( Race judge and jury), the committee boat was bust so I had to take the Rescue launch and that was it , I never really enjoyed sailing again and realised it was speed that interested me.
My first speed boat cost £20 (a broom) which I owned 32/64 share with one of my school mates , we sank it /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
Then took a Falcon out at hightide so I couldn't run aground, never bought a chart, just used a 5 inch to the mile OS road atlas.
I got a bigger boat and followed someone to Dover, I kept the track so we could go on our own and find our way back.
from Dover we set off to France by following the Pride of Calais, we couldn't keep up and we lost sight of it, didn't matter as I guessed another would be along soon and sure enough it was, we ended up in Boulonge but had a great weekend. Two weeks latter we went again but this time our mates we followed to Dover followed us to France and that was the start of assumptions that I knew what I was doing.
I kept the GPS when I upgraded to the next boat so we could still find France, one of my mates was selling his Garmin gps, I knew he had been to the channel Islands so I bought that extending my cruising grounds /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
And thats it really, so when I ask a question regarding Navigation, fog and collision regs they are genuine questions.
I am still unsure what to do in a TSS when you have a Ship on your port side.
I did go on a RYA vhf course but I was disappointed with the idiot who was more interested in telling how to SAIL into a marina in the dark without lights on and leave early as to avoid marina fees.
Also followed an RYA instructor to St Helier who took us through wind against tide Alderney race..........what a plonker !
Hence you can understand why I put more reliance on what I hear from experienced skippers in club bars, pontoons, here /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
I do have a passage plan chart now as it came with the boat gps and one of my mates gave me some of his old charts that I inked over some old pencil lines.................if the passage was right for him why bother to change it next time /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
MBM cruises were very easy to follow, I recommend them to newbies, very easy way to build a comprehensive Track library.