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On Thu, 2 Jan 2020 17:48:30 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: Don't think we were talking "seamanship". That's a wide ranging subject. Boating with "local knowledge" really isn't celestial navigation either. I think very few of us .... with the exception of Wayne ... really needs to know how to navigate by the stars. === I studied celestial navigation back in the early 80s when it was still required for ocean navigation. I own an inexpensive sextant and have taken a few sights with it but don't carry it on the boat since we have multiple, redundant GPS units. Back in the day we used to sail offshore from the Cape Cod Canal up to Maine using paper charts, compass and dead reckoning. Making landfall in Maine on a foggy, windy morning had an element of uncertainty and excitement but always ended up within a mile or so of where we expected. I could still navigate by compass, charts and dead reckoning if the entire GPS system went out but it would take a while to get used to the uncertainty factor. There are tricks of the trade for dealing with positional uncertainty but they are rapidly becoming a lost art. |
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