AHoy2
Well-Known Member
Having learnt and developed my navigation as a raggie it came as a bit of an eye-opener to me to find out how much more difficult navigation and pilotage can be on a power boat. The two main factors are the much higher pace of work and (for smaller mobos) the difficulty in reading and operating chart plotters due to the boats movement. Similarly paper charts cannot be referred to whilst at speed.
During my mobo training I was expected to safely navigate solo at the boats cruising speed (28Kn +) and also carry out (relatively) fast pilotage at 15 to 20 knots approaching/in harbour. Before anyone pipes up, these were legal and sensible speeds for the conditions and areas concerned. It was soon obvious that standard raggie nav practice wouldn't cut it - cue the simple but effective stick/ladder notes raised by srevir. The form of "ladder" navigation note I was taught referenced all detail to the boats heading i.e. ahead/port/starboard and included nav marks/lights/transits/hazards plus course/distance/time per "rung". I use A4 size paper allowing space for the info in BIG clear text/graphics and place this in a rigid secured plastic wallet. Properly prepared it is a very effective method, especially if single-handed. The plotter and paper chart remain to hand for reference. I am sure a Powerboat Instructor could provide the finer details for anyone interested.
Re. Captainslarty and wooslehunter, at low speed many mobos are less manouverable and far more subject to wind force than sailboats under power - if you have mobo experience and think otherwise then we have different experiences ;>)
A.
During my mobo training I was expected to safely navigate solo at the boats cruising speed (28Kn +) and also carry out (relatively) fast pilotage at 15 to 20 knots approaching/in harbour. Before anyone pipes up, these were legal and sensible speeds for the conditions and areas concerned. It was soon obvious that standard raggie nav practice wouldn't cut it - cue the simple but effective stick/ladder notes raised by srevir. The form of "ladder" navigation note I was taught referenced all detail to the boats heading i.e. ahead/port/starboard and included nav marks/lights/transits/hazards plus course/distance/time per "rung". I use A4 size paper allowing space for the info in BIG clear text/graphics and place this in a rigid secured plastic wallet. Properly prepared it is a very effective method, especially if single-handed. The plotter and paper chart remain to hand for reference. I am sure a Powerboat Instructor could provide the finer details for anyone interested.
Re. Captainslarty and wooslehunter, at low speed many mobos are less manouverable and far more subject to wind force than sailboats under power - if you have mobo experience and think otherwise then we have different experiences ;>)
A.