Navigation, Pilotage, Buoyage, Colregs, and Guidebooks

Make Your Own Charts

Passage Planning with Digital Wave

Celestial Navigation

Emergency Navigation by David Burch.  i am reading this right now, and i find it an extremely valuable resource to increase the situational awareness of any navigator in any circumstance.  Awareness of the stars, the winds, the sea state among other things is very helpful for anyone contemplating a voyage on the sea.

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Celestial Navigation Course

AT-MJB Sight Reduction ProForma 0.2

Sight Reduction Sheet   courtesy of Malcolm Buchanan and Andrew Troup, 1983

A Short Guide to Celestial Navigation

Adjusting the Marine Sextant

Navigation Worksheets

Sextant Users Guide

Piloting

This is a Bowditch classic. All things are rounded off so you can figure things out in your head as you’re passing time on the mid-watch.

Some givens…
Round of a Nautical Mile to 2000 yds.
D = Distance
S = Lateral Separation
A = Angular Difference in degrees

D/60 = S/A
DA/60 = S
etc… you can form it to fit your purposes.

Situation 1. You’re 6 miles from your next port sailing due North. The wind shifts and you have to sail 010. How far off course will that make you.

S is what we’re figuring out. So (6 x 10)/60 = 1 nm. Use whatever units for distance are handy, just keep it consistent.

What’s really handy about that is that when you’re doing some “what if” work when trying to reach a destination, just figure out the distance for 1 degree. So the distance divided by 60. 6 miles = 12000 yds. 12000/60 = 200 yds. Then as you choose your course you can multiply by the degrees off course. If you can only make 015, you have 15 x 200 yds = 3000yds – 1.5 NM.

Situation 2. Turn that around and make is something you want to avoid. We’re looking at the chart and see that the lighthouse on the starboard bow at 030, 3 miles away, marks a point with hazardous waters. Lets say we want to give it wide berth and stay 1000yds (half mile) from the thing. You can get the plotter going or just do some quick head math.

3 Miles = 6000 yds. Divide by 60 = 100yds separation for each degree off of 030. 1000yds desired separation divided by 100 yards per degree = 10 degrees. So we need to steer 020 or left of that to stay clear .

Sure it’s not all 6 and 12 mile figures, but with sailing there’s usually time for a little long division in your head. Also this gets less accurate as the angle gets larger because in reality each degree would be slightly larger separation. But under 45 degrees angle the difference is negligible and we’re just trying to get in the ballpark.

Cape Cod Tide Tables 2022

Colregs

COLREGS Summary and Action Chart 

Navigation Course Online

Ocean Pilot Charts

Radian Rule

Online List of Navigational Charts and Guidebooks

The Sailboat Cruiser

Tides and Currents at DeepZoom.com

Free Online Navigation Course – The old fashioned way

Navigation Rules Practice Test  – Test your knowledge in the safety of your home.

Open CPN and Open Plotter

Raspberry Pi and Open Plotter

Aqua Map Up and Running in 3 Steps

Open Plotter

Exploring OpenCPN (v3.0)

RTL-SDR AIS Dongle

Detailed Raspberry Pi Setup Open CPN

Colregs and Buoyage

Handbook of the Nautical Rules of the Road

COLREGS Summary and Action Chart

COLREG-1972

IALA-Buoyage-Systems A and B

Canadian Coast Guard Buoyage System

 

Canadian Aids to Navigation

Online List of Navigational Charts and Guidebooks

Compass Compensation

Navigation Course PDF

Navigation Course Online

US Aids To Navigation Guide

Starpath Navigation Courses

Neptune Planner Navigation App

Racing Rules

Buoy Room

Guide Books and Pilot Charts

Free Cruising Guides to the Caribbean – Includes a section on security in port – Includes ads.  There is a whole lot of information in the section on the DR.  Culture, what to expect from the officials, prices to pay for “tips”, and what things are legally required.  Check it out!

A Cruisers Guide to Cape Breton Island

Coast Pilots – Atlantic Canada

Ocean Pilot Charts

Zuluwaterways – Crowd Sourced Info for the Boat Captain

Fremantle Sailing Club Cruising Guide to the Australian Bight

Jimmy Cornell’s “Where Do All the Boats Go?”

Tahiti Cruisers Guide