Kukri
Well-known member
It's actually has a good deal more relevance than knowing the depth to within 10mm.
If you're expecting the wind to back as you approach a windward shore, you can plan your tacks from some way off in order to prevent finding yourself being headed as you near your destination. Do so and find yourself downtide to boot, and you can easily join the ranks of amateurs who motor the last couple of miles uptide and upwind to their destination.
Knowing of such effects also allows one to make the most of heavier or lighter airs (as required) found on opposite sides of channels parallel to which the wind is blowing as caused by convergence and divergence.
Thank you for that, which of course I accept. Could we take this a little further?
I should say that most of my sailing has been in clumping gaff cutters which hardly notice a lift or a header of five degrees - what I do in practice, and what seems to work well, is to assume that the wind will tend to blow more parallel to the coast as I close it.
I cautiously suggest that a backing component of five degrees - half a point in old money - will normally be imperceptible in relation to the change in the wind due to the passage of the weather system that generates it, if the wind is associated with a depression, or to the veer that occurs with a sea beeze as the day goes on.
For example, I often find myself approaching Harwich from the east (as do many of us!) In that situation the wind "ought" to back slightly and free me, but I cannot remember it ever doing that - what it does more often in my recollection is to veer, either because of the passage of the associated low or because there is a sea breeze component in the wind and in my experience a sea breeze will tend to veer as the day goes on - to quite a pronounced extent.