I tend to be a seat of my pants navigator who would never pass an RYA exam. As a result I sometimes wander into danger but have an instinct for recognizing danger and digging myself out of such a situation.
Having read posts in the other plotter thread it occurs to me that I do not use mine the same way e.g. sail between waypoints researched before departure, instead I head off on a passage with a belief that I know how to get from A to B using the English Channel chart lodged in my brain. The plotter is just there for reassurance.
For example if heading to St Peter Port from Gosport this is how I would navigate:
Six hours later I will repeat the last 4 steps above minus the beer.
Having read posts in the other plotter thread it occurs to me that I do not use mine the same way e.g. sail between waypoints researched before departure, instead I head off on a passage with a belief that I know how to get from A to B using the English Channel chart lodged in my brain. The plotter is just there for reassurance.
For example if heading to St Peter Port from Gosport this is how I would navigate:
- With zero preparation leave when I am ready probably sometime in the afternoon with an expectation of a night at sea.
- Through prior observation I will have an idea of when I will not have to punch the tide at the Portsmouth harbour entrance.
- Once outside the harbour entrance while at the helm I will zoom to a tidal diamond near Yarmouth to see when the Hurst tide turns east and do a quick mental calculation to see if I can scoot down the Solent before the tide turns, if not I will head out east around the IOW.
- Mental pilotage will get me to Ventnor, I might sneak a view at the plotter screen to be reminded of offlying dangers near Culver Cliff.
- From memory I know I can scrape past Ventnor fairly close.
- I will steer for a middling point in the Race after scrolling the plotter to the Race.
- After observing boat speed I will estimate time to the Race in my head.
- I will then find a tidal diamond on the screen 10 miles north of Cap De La Hague and estimate east/west offset by totting up the net offset for the final 3 hours approaching the Race.
- Mentally plotting that offset on the screen I will then adjust the helm to head for that point by watching the plotter course prediction line move on the chart zoomed to the Race.
Six hours later I will repeat the last 4 steps above minus the beer.
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