Wot! No GPS....?

zoidberg

Well-known member
Joined
12 Nov 2016
Messages
6,360
Visit site
50255409832_bb8a3acbce_c.jpg
 

capnsensible

Well-known member
Joined
15 Mar 2007
Messages
46,723
Location
Atlantic
Visit site
Tahiti s probably much like Hounslow now,except sunnier?
Tahiti is actually a pleasant tropical looking island. From a distance. Feels good when you raise it on the horizon. Yay.

The marina is kinda ok and not busy. It's a very crumbly French colonial ashore. Lots of typically tropical wooden shacks by storm drains. I would not call it cheerful.

The dusky maidens clearly discovered pizza a few generations ago and tend towards um, statuesque.

However it's an ideal place to secure a pair of black pearl earrings to wow your honey on returning home. ?

I enjoyed it.
 

capnsensible

Well-known member
Joined
15 Mar 2007
Messages
46,723
Location
Atlantic
Visit site
Oh and for Astro, Orion stands on his head and some other stars that you may have heard of are seen a bit easier to see in a less cluttered Sky. When it's not honking with rain. ?
 

GHA

Well-known member
Joined
26 Jun 2013
Messages
12,517
Location
Hopefully somewhere warm
Visit site
Didn't Moitessier say in one of his books how one day in the future things would be much better cos we would have a box which would speak to the satellites and tell us exactly where we are .
Literary dreamer but pragmatic sailor :cool:
 

cherod

N/A
Joined
2 Dec 2018
Messages
5,360
Visit site
Pen duick it was ,, re the saftey line he is quoted as saying “ he knew he was taking a risk but preferefd to live free on his boat “ And refused to have s radio on board
 

Neeves

Well-known member
Joined
20 Nov 2011
Messages
13,188
Location
Sydney, Australia.
Visit site
Assuming you are not swept overboard but are still crossing an ocean - the question then arises (sticking to the theme of the thread) - what do you do were GPS to go down. Maybe its something simple - your electrics fail, the chart plotter fails, some malicious noggin squirrels into the GPS system (and this latter will have many more implications than Covid 19 or squabbles over the South China Sea). How many who cross oceans still have HF and don't need to rely on satellites (sat phone).

How many carry a sextant, the requisite tables and know how to use them? How many have a log, speed/distance, that is independent of the main electrics - I'm assuming everyone has a magnetic compass. Does everyone carry paper charts. Does everyone assiduously keep hard copy of lat and long, seawater temperature and plot on those same paper charts? How many have a barometer.

Just wondering how far complacency has sunk in.

Jonathan
 
Top