GHA
Well-Known Member
Wow 50 degrees is high latitude. Think only Lizard Point in Britain is the only place in lower latitudes then.
50N & 50S are very different places apparently........
Wow 50 degrees is high latitude. Think only Lizard Point in Britain is the only place in lower latitudes then.
Yes, that's what I was thinking. Sailing on the West Coast, I never really thought of myself being a rufty-tuffty High Latitude sailor.![]()
Ah... but you have the Gulf Stream...... the best we can manage is the Humbolt..
'.
The norm however was to put the clocks forward by half an hour or a full hour - depending on the ship's speed - at midnight so that 'noon'/mer. pass. the following day would fall close to 1200 clock time.
That’s really interesting, especially to a novice/recreational ocean sailor.
Other than keeping MP closer to ships 12h00, are there any other practical advantages in changing every 7.5 deg Long / half an hour?
I’d “assumed” that on an average yacht winter Atlantic crossing ships time would be changed by 1 hour increments, say approx every 800M / 5 days / 15 deg Long.
Did you ever run noon to noon UT? For navigation purposes rather than crew watchkeeping in Local?
Wow 50 degrees is high latitude. Think only Lizard Point in Britain is the only place in lower latitudes then.
Yes, that's what I was thinking. Sailing on the West Coast, I never really thought of myself being a rufty-tuffty High Latitude sailor.![]()
50N & 50S are very different places apparently........
Ah... but you have the Gulf Stream...... the best we can manage is the Humbolt..
Or have I missed something?
Correcto....faster the ship and higher the latitude more likely you are to shift in one hour steps.... standard issue ship doing 15 knots on a NE/SE/SW/NW course in equatorial waters will probably only flog the clocks 30 minutes once every few days...
On my wee ship in this modern age we don't worry about mer pass... we shift the clocks so that sunset is about 2000.... lets the evening meal be taken in daylight just before change of watch..... cook serves up-eats-goes on watch, 4 to 8 eats - cleans up - goes to bed....
Those were my initial thoughts, before being shown the right path by the more enlightened ones..a very educational thread, thanks for the responses; as often on here, I'm glad I asked the question..The day length must be the same (although you will be travelling slower as you get close to the poles) but your local noon changes as your longitude changes, nothing to do with latitude.
So the statement is wrong, noon to noon in the same place is 24hrs
Or have I missed something?
Those were my initial thoughts, before being shown the right path by the more enlightened ones..a very educational thread, thanks for the responses; as often on here, I'm glad I asked the question..
Thanks Richard,
What I meant was the statement (a day noon to noon in these high latitudes is only about 23 1/2 hours)
as it stands is wrong as it suggests it is the latitude which shortens the day and not the movement.
Thanks Richard,
What I meant was the statement (a day noon to noon in these high latitudes is only about 23 1/2 hours)
as it stands is wrong as it suggests it is the latitude which shortens the day and not the movement.