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![]() "Calif Bill" wrote in message ... "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Sun, 04 Jan 2009 20:35:50 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 04 Jan 2009 19:59:03 -0500, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Sun, 04 Jan 2009 19:27:49 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 4 Jan 2009 08:57:23 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: Took my daughter kayaking yesterday with my wife and I in the canoe and Katie in her kayak. Went in the salt marshes on the Gulf coast here (N. FL). We got out into an area maybe 1/4 mile wide when fog started coming in and I decided to hug shore justb in case. Sure enough, very quickly you could barely see 50'. We easily got back by following the shore but if we had been out in the middle, it would have been a problem. I did not have my compass that I normally carry in my sailing bag. From now on, compass goes with me on all trips. I keep an old boy scout style compass with me wherever I am on the water. In the boat it is handy for tracking storms. Shoot a real bearing on the edge of the cloud you are concerned about and check it again a few minutes later. That will tell you which way it is moving, relative to your course. In a "bail out" situation, a compass will help me navigate through the mangroves so I can walk home. In a bail out situation, a portable GPS is going to be a hell of a lot more informative than a compass. Although I do carry a compass, I also carry a small portable GPS - Magellan Triton 200. http://www.magellangps.com/products/....asp?segID=425 Never had a dead battery in my compass ;-) True enough, but you don't need to keep the GPS up and running the whole time either. A good set of batteries and a set of spares can last you a couple of weeks if you use the GPS properly in an emergency situation. But your point is well taken - a compass doesn't require a lot of skill. Although, just to make a point, a lot of people don't understand the difference between True and Magnetic North and that can lead to diaster in and of itself. -- Happy Holidays and Merry Whatever It Is That ****es Liberals Off. We were kayaking at Point Arena late September. Fog came in and was hard to see the shore. Couple of friends doing some filming on MLPA's come across a guy on a sort of pontoon kayak, paddling out to sea. He thought he was paddling towards the bluffs. Just a fog bluff. No radio, no GPS, no compass. Next stop Hawaii of lucky, or Asia if not. I carry a handheld GPS, a compass and a VHF when I boat. Fog is very common around here from June through July and sometimes September. |
#3
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Don White wrote:
"Calif Bill" wrote in message ... "Tom Francis - SWSports" wrote in message ... On Sun, 04 Jan 2009 20:35:50 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 04 Jan 2009 19:59:03 -0500, Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Sun, 04 Jan 2009 19:27:49 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 4 Jan 2009 08:57:23 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: Took my daughter kayaking yesterday with my wife and I in the canoe and Katie in her kayak. Went in the salt marshes on the Gulf coast here (N. FL). We got out into an area maybe 1/4 mile wide when fog started coming in and I decided to hug shore justb in case. Sure enough, very quickly you could barely see 50'. We easily got back by following the shore but if we had been out in the middle, it would have been a problem. I did not have my compass that I normally carry in my sailing bag. From now on, compass goes with me on all trips. I keep an old boy scout style compass with me wherever I am on the water. In the boat it is handy for tracking storms. Shoot a real bearing on the edge of the cloud you are concerned about and check it again a few minutes later. That will tell you which way it is moving, relative to your course. In a "bail out" situation, a compass will help me navigate through the mangroves so I can walk home. In a bail out situation, a portable GPS is going to be a hell of a lot more informative than a compass. Although I do carry a compass, I also carry a small portable GPS - Magellan Triton 200. http://www.magellangps.com/products/....asp?segID=425 Never had a dead battery in my compass ;-) True enough, but you don't need to keep the GPS up and running the whole time either. A good set of batteries and a set of spares can last you a couple of weeks if you use the GPS properly in an emergency situation. But your point is well taken - a compass doesn't require a lot of skill. Although, just to make a point, a lot of people don't understand the difference between True and Magnetic North and that can lead to diaster in and of itself. -- Happy Holidays and Merry Whatever It Is That ****es Liberals Off. We were kayaking at Point Arena late September. Fog came in and was hard to see the shore. Couple of friends doing some filming on MLPA's come across a guy on a sort of pontoon kayak, paddling out to sea. He thought he was paddling towards the bluffs. Just a fog bluff. No radio, no GPS, no compass. Next stop Hawaii of lucky, or Asia if not. I carry a handheld GPS, a compass and a VHF when I boat. Fog is very common around here from June through July and sometimes September. In a 25hp rowboat? When is the last time you were out of sight from shore, dummy? |
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