Giblets
Well-Known Member
A small technical point on the Walker logs. Where does one apply the oil that comes with 'em?
A small technical point on the Walker logs. Where does one apply the oil that comes with 'em?
Hmm, well, I respect your view as I think you have far more experience than I, but when sailing out of Whitby on the NE coast I regularly crossed to Holland during the 1970s, some 250NM, give or take. Once, with light SE head winds, it took me 4 days. Four days of being swept up and down the North Sea by tides and arriving on a low featureless coast without a clue where I was despite all possible DR calculations. I always aimed high so knew to turn right on seeing land and sailing until seeing something to identify or it got dark enough to show the lights.Simple. It's because the pleasure and relief of a satisfactory landfall achieved by dead reckoning and compass fixes is worth a 1000 times what you get when the GPS tells you that you're there. If you've only ever navigated with GPS, you don't know the joy that you are missing.
I'm sure I'll be accused of being an ignorant heathen, but I can't understand this fascination with trailed logs. They're inconvenient and inaccurate, so why bother? The GPS will tell you very precisely how far you've travelled, which surely is the essence of what you want to know.
Please read post# 6 from the OP.You mention not having a GPS, I would strongly suggest you fit a GPS and have a handheld as backup every other long distance boat does, so why make life difficult.
Hmm, well, I respect your view as I think you have far more experience than I, but when sailing out of Whitby on the NE coast I regularly crossed to Holland during the 1970s, some 250NM, give or take. Once, with light SE head winds, it took me 4 days. Four days of being swept up and down the North Sea by tides and arriving on a low featureless coast without a clue where I was despite all possible DR calculations. I always aimed high so knew to turn right on seeing land and sailing until seeing something to identify or it got dark enough to show the lights.
Astro was out because it was usually 100% cloud cover, RDF possible but a bit vague ... Knowing one's position accurately and therefore where any potential danger lies is a fundamental safety factor. Yes, a sense of achievement, but I can do without the stress - give me GPS any day.

You mention not having a GPS, I would strongly suggest you fit a GPS and have a handheld as backup every other long distance boat does, so why make life difficult. One other thought it has been known for sharks to bite off towed logs, thinking they are fish, which would leave you with nothing.
Or charts!It may be hard to believe, but people actually managed to navigate before chartplotters.
Or charts!
Through the two holes in the dial, to the bearing at the back and and, if memory serves me aright, to the hole under the tail of the body.
Tip for launching & recovery. I have a plastic ball attached to the string close to the meter end. It makes it really easy to see the string spinning from a distance & they do get fouled with weed some times. I also have a short cord with a small clip on the end. This I use to clip the meter to the boat as for safety while it's in use.
So to launch flake out the cord. Clip on to the meter & then pay out the cord in a long loop. Launch the spinner only after all of the cord is out in a long loop. That way, if you get a knot, there isn't a spinner spinning away & making it worse while you sort out the knot. They do happen.
To recover, this is where the plastic ball & the short cord with the clip come in. Clip the clip over the spinner cord aft of the ball. Then what ever happens, you can't lose the cord & spinner. Then disconnect the spinner cord from the meter & stream it backwards pulling in the spinner. Once the cord is completely reversed, you have the spinner & any twists in the cord spin out. Then pull in the cord & coil it. If you just try to pull the spinner in, it will spin enough times before you get to it, so you have a completely twisted up knot of cord.