rubberduck
Well-Known Member
Planning on going around the coast from Chatham to Southampton somewhere, route we have plotted is between 4 & 8 nautical miles from the coast on average, is this too far out ?
Planning on going around the coast from Chatham to Southampton somewhere, route we have plotted is between 4 & 8 nautical miles from the coast on average, is this too far out ?
Done a rough route on nav planner as a precursor to doing it properly & duplicating on paper, question is regarding sight of land so SWMBO is happy.
Route avoids the sands which I am extremely familiar with being based on the east coast, it also avoids other hazards such as the TSS, perhaps someone should check his ruler!!
So, how far out will we loose sight of land ?
Depends how high the land is
At least 1/4 inch from the nearest hazard at whatever scale chart you have.
Planning on going around the coast from Chatham to Southampton somewhere, route we have plotted is between 4 & 8 nautical miles from the coast on average, is this too far out ?
Thanks, current route goes just outside goodwin, 8 nm out, which is as far out as it goes, rest is around 5nm give or take a couple. Thanks for the sensible answer.![]()
Planning on going around the coast from Chatham to Southampton somewhere, route we have plotted is between 4 & 8 nautical miles from the coast on average, is this too far out ?
The channel inside Goodwin is pretty straight forward to navigate, I know some more experienced people who go over sands at right tide, I never had the b**** to do it myself.
I've used the inside channel and watched a raggie go over the sands and after having seen the Goodwin wrecks tea towel and reading books on it I thought omg wtf!!![]()
At last some sensible answers for the OP why do some people just go out there way to be awkward