Allan
Well-Known Member
I certainly agree it could be wrong but, and I think you'll agree, it could also be right!
Allan
Allan
Maybe ten round the perimeter plus the mix of visitors and locals on the central pontoon. Mid you its heaving with visitors. SWMBO likes to eat at the cockpit table so I know what a monkey in the zoo feels like.
Local fishing boats have several passages through the rocks at the Lizard, aimed at avoiding foul tide and (often) the associated overfalls. Even a quick rounding close to Men Hir could save you miles and a lot of discomfort. What if you had a vid with commentary detailing the transits on your phone/comp/tablet? (provided by me and my Acme Navideo Ltd, of course). Manacles, Runnelstone, Godrevy......
Of course, if the device failed at the opportune moment your insurance might cast a jaundiced eye.
Local fishing boats have several passages through the rocks at the Lizard, aimed at avoiding foul tide and (often) the associated overfalls. Even a quick rounding close to Men Hir could save you miles and a lot of discomfort. What if you had a vid with commentary detailing the transits on your phone/comp/tablet? (provided by me and my Acme Navideo Ltd, of course). Manacles, Runnelstone, Godrevy......
Of course, if the device failed at the opportune moment your insurance might cast a jaundiced eye.
oh dear see the disagreeable bank holiday weather is forcasted :--((.your just have to stay there and enjoy the agreeable beer
Maybe ten round the perimeter plus the mix of visitors and locals on the central pontoon. Mid you its heaving with visitors. SWMBO likes to eat at the cockpit table so I know what a monkey in the zoo feels like.
If you want to hit Menhir, the end rock at the Lizard then keep the Black Head tight to Bass Point. To clear the shoal ground outside it (dangerous in ground sea) you need to see Carrick Luz, the cove at Lankidden, (it used to be the second 'town' on the Black Head, town = bunch of trees, but they went with Dutch elm.) Safer if not familiar to see Enys, the point E of Cadgwith which is a dead straight 45 deg slope. The Dales are in a line E of Menhir and show at LW. Sometimes, such as East wind and high water it is safer to pass close by in the early ebb, and at LW the flood comes SE out of Kynance early so better not if E wind. At high water there is no slack, it just goes round from SE to SW-bound, and our ends often don't even surface on springs.Always interested in short cuts Fisherman, as long as you allow for a 1.9 meter draft. I go through the manacles anyway and the inshore passage round the longships. Stay south of the dales round the lizard which is the one I feel less certain of, partly because of tides / overfalls and partly because of the floating mines that you chaps leave trying to catch lobbies.
Some waypoints through the lizard would be very useful.
From BH to Bass point, cut inside a half mile if foul tide. 300 yds off Bass point is OK, early ebb HW-1hr, there are transits for the Vrogue rock, rarely seen the weed on it (I may not know where I am, but I know where I'm not). Keep the Enys just in view to easily clear Menhir, 9 hours of strongest ebb tide, so avoid if W in wind, go off more. Avoid the whole shebang if sw wind over ebb tide.Thats all a bit localI normally operate with a daisy chain of way points and the autopilot told to follow them. But to make sure I undestand what you are saying, is it sense to go close inshore from black head to bass point or on a straight course? At bass point can I go cloe inshore inside the speman shoals or is it wisest to stay outside. Then at menhir / the dales, the charts suggest there is a close inshore passage clear of the overfalls so are you saying OK inshore in reasonable conditions?