jimbaerselman
Well-Known Member
But if you're moving relative to the backcloth, it's bearing will change. And the closer to it, the more rapid the change.
Puzzle that one out . . .
Puzzle that one out . . .
But if you're moving relative to the backcloth, it's bearing will change. And the closer to it, the more rapid the change.
Puzzle that one out . . .
'jimbaerselman' and others, the use of informal visual transits to assist tracking/determination of Line of Constant Bearing and whether a 'risk of collision exists' is hugely useful, but really needs demonstrating on the water and then practicing, for it is by no means intuitive. Perhaps it's a topic a little beyond the OP's original request and, introduced on here, more likely to confuse than assist..?
".....Live Magic and I travelled over 100NM in 5 days with a top speed through the water of 6.4kt and a top speed over the ground of 10kt! We sailed through fog, ventured outside the Solent, and met some new friends...."
"God gave you two ears and one mouth. Use them in that order....."
I have thought about this a little more and decided to list the things I would feel uncomfortable not having if I went to sea on a small boat. By small boat, I mean small cruiser... I hope it helps the OP and their question.
A chart/charts of the area.
An almanac (should include pilotage information and all other data you need)
A means of telling the time
A plotting device (Breton Plotter?) plus pencils and a pair of dividers.
A steering compass (which might double as a hand held compass?)
A lifejacket with harness for everyone on board.
A VHF (Could be handheld?) plus spare batteries.
A torch and some spare batteries
Some flares (We could discuss the minimum?)
A bilge pump and/or a bucket on a lanyard
Fire extinguisher(s)
Some basic First aid kit.
Some man over board kit (Danbouy-life ring etc)
Boat hook
Sharp knife
Binoculars
An anchor and appropriate cable.
A radio to listen to the shipping forecast would be a very cheap addition, although I appreciate that you can get the forecast by listening to the Coast Guard on the VHF. (But be aware that hand held VHF's eat batteries if you are not careful...)
PS I will grit my teeth and admit that you could sail without it, but one of the first things I would be adding to the above list would be an echo sounder.
I am also assuming that the boat has an engine, some places for crew to hook on to if wearing a harness and it has nav lights. If the boat has an outboard then you ought to have a kill cord for it and a spare one on board!
Beyond the most basic of day sailing, and even if you continue to sail only by day, some warm clothing and a means of making hot food becomes very important.
My list for a pocket cruiser operating in the Solent would be, not in any particular order:
- Reeds almanack (2013 version should be very cheap now. always buy late unless you sail through winter. Tides in the Solent are very powerful)
- reliable motor. Preferably inboard diesel. There's a little thing with an inboard volvo on ebay now. Inboard diesels are far better at propelling a boat than equivalent inboard, esp. in a chop. Also much more economical & less teeth chattering..
- Tools, in watertight plastic box. Esp. lump hammer and big adjustable spanner!
- A sweep (a very big oar)
- danforth anchor
- chart plotter of some description. garmin GPS60CS upwards. Do not rely on android phone with Navionics as battery life and waterproofing usually poor. Can make do with laminated chart and cheap 'numbers only' gps, but used plotters cheap nowadays...( I have a very basic one (garmin streetpilot) for sale for £50 o.n.o in need of a chart card. Can upload chart to your blank card. Can loan card until one comes up on e-bay!)
- good LED torch. I carry halfords bike headlight. cost ~£25 but effectively doesn't use batteries, they just go off slowlyRed one good for inside too.
- lifejacket or buoyancy aid. little boats can be quite tippy...
- safety harness. Little boats can be quite tippy and wet...
- something strong to clip harness to. ideally strongpoint in cockpit & jack line(s) to bow
- roller furling headsail
- slab reefing mainsail
- Android phone to get great weather forecasts from t'internet. google RASP, windfinder(superforecast), meteoblue(air), GRIB and many others.
- hand held compass (for collision avoidance)
- good knife
- marine band radio (plus spare AA battery case if handheld. Also tie it to the boat if handheld)
- spare fuel in can(s) (lots if you have a petrol motor) Can also be sold to (not) passing fuel-challenged vessels :0)
- spare thick fleece top.
- sunglasses (to stop salt spray in eyes)
- sun hat
- Waterproof waterproofs. (Even yellow oilies work if you are desperate) Cheap cag-in-a-bag ones will last s season if that. However, my Musto's, currently starting to fail at 25 years old are still more expensive p.a., but far nicer to be in.
- Flares. (debatable nowadays) There are many who are desperate to rid themselves of out of date ones, which would largely work fine if only just out of date. (not from the batch which blew up a few years ago when still in date!) (Allegedly the French get upset if you have old ones aboard so people do shed them)
- Spare bottles of water.
- lots of rope. say four mooring lines each of 10m and ideally a couple of longer ones for rafting up etc. Anchor line can be used.
- Some fenders. At least four, each at least 20" ones. Can be deflated if rarely used.
- waterproof bag for sleeping bag & another for clothes
- first aid kit
- bucket (strong with good secure handle. most builders bucket handles unhook & fall off) I have canvas one which is ideal, though not so easy to clean.
- sponge (decorators sponge is best)
- gaffer tape
- milliput epoxy putty
- string
- welding torch flint lighter (less of a problem if wetted) or several cheap lighters in poly box.
- boat hook (with plastic end so you can push away wayward boats)
- dinghy of some description. Even large kids inflatable if you are careful where you use it.
- Common sense
- sense of adventure
- sense of humour
- Independence
- Resourcefulness
- fog horn, one you blow.
Nice to have:
- echo sounder.
- binoculars
- wildlife id book
- deck scrubbing brush
- membership of club of like-minded souls
Beware of:
tides
QHM
Various shingle bars and overfalls
Bembridge ledge, an underwater cliff waiting to break your keel.
Sands off Ryde, Pompey, Chichester etc
submarine barriers
racing yachts
motor yachts (wake)
shipping
ferries
hovercraft
dangerous idiots
Don't bother with:
- sextant. I haven't used mine for years
- RDF. would be useful if satellites ever stop working
Now to get a flaming....
Forget it, do you day skippers and then go sailing on other peoples boats.... Whilst looking for your boat.
Do not buy anything other than your personnel sailing gear, you are on super tight budget you say? Sail other peoples boats its much more affordable.
Whilst doing this, look and decide what type of boat you want. Look at all of them...
There is no point buying in advance, the boat you buy will probably come with a surprising amount of bits (normally that you did not think you need) and a lack of things you thought you would need!
Acquire your list but if on a fine budget do not do anything until you have the boat...