Yacht Master
Yacht Master
Yacht Master
Tom Cunliffe The Complete Yachtmaster has been a bestseller since first publication and has established itself as the standard reference for Yachtmaster students as well as skippers of all levels of experience. In this edition, Tom Cunliffe brings together all the essentials of modern cruising in one volume. Subjects include an analysis of what makes a good skipper, the theory and practice of sailing, seamanship, navigation including chart plotters and PCs, meteorology, heavy weather, yacht stability and coping with emergencies. The Complete Yachtmaster promotes each subject as an integral part of the whole. It guides examination candidates as authoritatively and reassuringly through the RYA syllabus as a sea pilot bringing a ship to harbour. Required reading for all skippers whether on board or in the classroom.
Contents Introduction 1. The Skipper 2. The Theory of Sailing 3. Efficient Sailing 4. Basic Seamanship under Sail 5. Boat Handling under Sail 6. Boat Handling under Power 7. Ropes and Ropework 8. Anchoring 9. Yacht Engines 10. Sailing in Heavy Weather 11. Navigation: an Introduction 12. Charts, Publications and Chart Table Tools 13. Aids to Navigation 14. Tidal Heights 15. Tidal Streams 16. Traditional Navigational Inputs 17. The Estimated Position 18. Classical Position Fixing 19. GPS and Radar 20. Course Shaping 21. Navigational Strategy 22. Passage Planning 23. Pilotage 24. Passage Navigation 25. Domestics of a Passage 26. Fog 27. Tactics and Navigation in Heavy Weather 28. Damage Control 29. Emergencies 30. Man Overboard 31. Weather Appendix: Stability in Sailing Yachts
Introduction
The sailors market-place is well stocked with books on every topic to do with salt water. I ought to know, Ive written a number of them myself. There are two groups of specialist sailing texts. One deals with matters such as navigation, boat handling and meteorology, with which every skipper must have more than a nodding acquaintance. The other caters for the ever-enlarging number of subjects relating less directly to the essence of moving a yacht safely from one location to another. The volume you are about to read is designed specifically for skippers and potential skippers. Its purpose is to gather together all those vital areas of expertise to be found in the first group of books, place them in a systematic order between two covers, and discuss them in a practical way. The book should therefore not only prove useful as a companion to a sailing course, either hands-on or theoretical, but will also provide a long-term work of reference for the boats bookshelf: I make no claim that The Complete Yachtmaster is the only work you will require in order to take charge of a yacht on a round-the-world voyage. Certain items, such as the use of radio communications, require a specialist volume in their own right, and it is not insignificant that teaching the VHF syllabus is a separate subject in most mainstream training systems. Likewise, the wider aspects of boat maintenance and general husbandry are barely touched here. Peoples needs in such departments vary enormously, as do their talents for servicing them. If you own a classic wooden vessel you will have no desire to read about the application of epoxy coatings to a blistered GRP hull, but whatever type of craft you sail, you should know how to calculate the rise of tide at a given time and location. You may be such a congenital mechanical duffer that the finest manual on boat electrics will be no more than an incubus on your chart table, while the acquisition of the same work could change your neighbours life. Both of you, however, share an imperative demand for the skill to bring your vessels alongside crisply, cleanly and without fuss. It is to such primary questions that this book is dedicated. In it, you will find the basic information which, when mastered and practised, will enable you to skipper a well-found yacht on coastal and offshore passages, taking due account of night and day, and whatever weather may betide. Throughout the English-speaking world, cruising training schemes have been set up by national and private authorities. The contents of all of these are more or less the same, forming the core of what all skippers should have at their fingertips. The British-based RYA Yachtmaster programme is the oldest and among the best established. It has been used as a loose framework for this book, and I can give it no better recommendation than to cite the beginning of my own history as a certificated yachtmaster. I turned up at the appointed hour, aged 30, to take an at-sea examination in my own yacht. She was a 13 ton cutter which, at the time, had no engine. I had recently completed a cruise from the UK to Brazil and home again via the Caribbean, the USA and Canada. I was annoyed at the need to have a ticket, but I was driven into the arms of the establishment because I had lost a plum delivery job to a man who had one. My expectations were for needless red tape, a desk sailor as an examiner, and a lot of stupid questions. I couldnt have been more wrong. The list of things I was supposed to know was comprehensive and entirely sensible. My examiner proved far more interested in whether I could sail than if I knew the morse code (now effectively discontinued from the scheme), and his probing revealed one or two gaps in my armour of which I was justly ashamed. He passed me, but with a stiff talking-to. I thought about my exam for six months, then I gave up delivering yachts to become a sailing instructor. Since those days, I have spent enough time voyaging and working with trainers in other countries to recognise that while such details as buoyage and format of tide tables may vary, the essentials of seafaring emphatically do not. Sailors are travelling more than they used to. Ever greater numbers of us are taking to the oceans in our own vessels, or as crew for others, while the ready availability of charter craft in the best cruising grounds worldwide is tempting more of us to try something different. For these reasons, though the spelling follows British rather than North American forms, The Complete Yachtmaster is produced without bias to the specific arrangements of any one nation. I wrote the book while resident near the Solent, so some of the photographs depict scenes in southern English waters, but what is going on could be happening anywhere. Youll notice that the business of sailing and boat handling is explored in the early chapters of the book. The reason for this is simple. When we go down to our boats for the weekend, we tell our neighbours we are going sailing. No one ever says, Oh, Im off for a spot of navigation. See you on Sunday night. The sailing is the most important thing. Of all the facets of cruising, it requires the most practice and, for many people, it is the most difficult thing to learn. I cannot end this introduction without a note of explanation concerning the fact that throughout the text, skippers, mates, cooks and the rest are normally awarded the masculine form of the personal pronoun. To do otherwise would be simply too cumbersome both to read and to write, but absolutely no suggestion of male ascendancy is to be implied. If I note that When the skipper has navigated the yacht on to the rocks, it is he who must bear the blame, I intend no hint that a female skipper would not be just as capable of so dismal a denouement, but to write he or she every time is a non-starter. Therefore, I have followed the convention adopted by the classical languages. The masculine form is used where a single word is required, to refer to a person whose sex is, for the purposes of the text at least, indeterminate or irrelevant. Likewise a boat is always referred to as she.
T om Cunliffe
1. The Skipper
Skippering a yacht is one of the most satisfactory recreations known. For many of us, it grows into more than a mere pastime, with our jobs becoming only the means to finance our boating lives. Yachting is uniquely satisfying because, if it is practised to the full, it engages every facet of our being. It can be as physical as we care to make it. It is intellectual, with the problems posed by navigation often requiring solutions of great accuracy. It is also aesthetic: there are few more beautiful human creations than a sailboat carving her way through the sea. Lastly, and probably most important of all, there are times when it asks serious questions about the core of our characters. The net result is that the captains role becomes so absorbing as an end in itself that it leaves little time for worrying about other things. This only works, though, if you are at one with the whole boating environment. The sort of skipper who gets the balance of his duties wrong tends to find his own performance less than satisfactory. Poor results, especially if they seem inexplicable, lead to a general lack of well-being, and before long the business of yachting begins to lose its lustre, not only for the skipper, but also for those who have chosen to sail with him. A glance at the chapter headings of this book gives a rough idea of the number of definable skills which must be at the disposal of the yachtmaster. These subjects are not individual streams of learning. Each spills over into the others, by varying amounts under different circumstances. The good skipper is not only master of every discipline, he is able to evaluate the amount of time that should be devoted to each in a given situation. This sense of proportion comes best with experience, but education and a degree of self-training in the objective assessment of a task can be an enormous help. On an average passage in coastal waters, even if the area is unfamiliar to the skipper, the amount of time spent navigating should be small. After all, what is there to do? You have only to ascertain your position from time to time, make sure that you are on track for your destination, or if not, then at least that you are making satisfactory progress to windward, and that your yacht is maintaining an adequate clearance from any dangers. That is all there is to it. So long as you are at home with the simple techniques required to achieve this end you should have to spend only a few minutes each hour at the chart table. The remainder of your time is then available for such other chores as getting the best from the boat, making sure the crew are fed, watered and happy, cheering up cousin Bert who is turning green in the aft lee corner of the cockpit, noting the squall galloping down out of the winds eye, and avoiding the supertanker trying to expunge you and your team from the face of the ocean blue. So it is with a skipper who is comfortable with the job. Sadly, life isnt always like that. There is a strong tendency for sailors who are less than perfectly sure of themselves to spend far too much time at the navigation station. To say that they over-navigate is not strictly true because often, twenty minutes of effort result only in a spidery mess of indeterminate lines on the chart, followed by an undignified scurry to the lee rail. The skipper who falls into this trap isnt lacking in a sense of responsibility, he is indicating a shortage of competence in extracting the essence of his navigational requirements. At sea, the skippers place may be in the cockpit, in the galley, or even in his bunk. The one place where he is not required for anything but the minimum of time is in the navigatorium. Numerous people fail their hands-on Yachtmaster examination for making this mistake. To come back at the examiner and say, But I thought that is what you would have expected of me, indicates a dangerously low degree of self-confidence. The real seaman says to himself, I know what Im doing, and if this character doesnt like it, the whole system is out of order. In fact, the system is in a fair state of health, so a capable person with such an approach will probably get the ticket, always provided there is no shortfall in sailing skills. There is more to good skippering than maintaining a sense of proportion at sea. Even at the planning stage, one area of knowledge integrates with others to produce a smooth-running result. You cant think out a ten-day cruise, or even a 12-hour beat to windward, without the tactical capacity to make the most of any projected weather changes. A mathematically accurate tidal height calculation can be a dangerous item of data if no allowance is made for sea state, while a difficult piece of night pilotage is often rendered less traumatic by noting the time of moonrise and making use of the light available an hour or so later. There are some skippers with whom people come back to sail over and over again. Others have constant problems persuading their victims to return on board. The difference is never coincidence, though it may occasionally result from a genuine personality clash. Far more often, disharmony on board a small vessel is the direct fault of the person in charge. Where a skipper is of marginal technical competence, his best chance of maintaining the morale of his team lies in a lets tackle this problem together approach. If the sea spares him and he possesses interpersonal skills of a high order, he and his crew may yet have an enjoyable time. Even an able autocrat who delegates few of his duties is liable to finish up with a crew whose only function aboard is to further his ends, rather than a group working under his overall guidance towards a goal they all seek. So long as the skipper knows his business, the success and the happiness of the crew depend largely upon thoughtful delegation and calm, positive communication. If all hands are clear about what is expected of them and no one is asked to perform a task which is unsuitable to his ability, morale starts out on a sound footing. The skipper can then work with the crew to sort out watch systems, apportion the less pleasant duties, and ensure that the food and drink departments are running smartly. A capable navigator, or even a trainee, can be detailed to keep an eye on the yachts position. Given that his appointment is not then repeatedly compromised by an insecure skipper, the navigators sense of achievement will make him a better companion than if he had merely as an autopilot and winch-winder. A skilled leader can pass surprising amount of responsibility to people of limited qualification, He does this by being well on top of the task himself, assigning a function which may be demanding to the person concerned, but over which he can keep a controlling eye. If all goes well, a word of praise will work wonders for the atmosphere aboard. If things begin to go awry, the situation can be nipped in the bud by a deft, tactful intervention, after which the delegate can continue, better informed, but much chastened. Even small children can have their active place in the ships company; taking charge of fenders and flags makes an excellent start to a seafaring career. Pride in a task, however small, needs encouraging. It results in a happy ship whose objectives are successfully achieved with no fuss at all. The natural quiet authority of an able skipper often places him in the position of a father-figure with the family that his crew rapidly becomes. Age does not enter into this, nor does sex. I have seen 25-year-olds slip naturally into this role when some of their crew have been twice their years. This state of affairs is natural and entirely beneficial to the well-being of all on board. It is also widely precedented. Arguably the most successful skippers the sea has ever known were on the China clippers of the 1850s. One imagines such men as being hoary greybeards gazing aloft with eyes left bloody by half a century of wind-burn. In fact, many were under thirty. But every one of them was referred to by his crew as The Old Man.
Sails
Contrary to what you might assume, a sail isnt a bag for collecting wind, it is an aerofoil which operates on the same principle as the wing of an aeroplane. If an aerofoil is presented at the correct angle to a stream of air, it causes the air to bend with the result that the air on the convex side of the foil is accelerated. It is a law of the universe that if a flowing gas can be induced to travel more quickly it will exert less pressure. This means that there is a pressure difference between the two faces of a functioning aerofoil. Low pressure is on the convex side, and comparatively high pressure opposes it. In the case of an aircraft the convex side of a basic wing is uppermost. The wing is therefore sucked upwards into the area of lower pressure just as surely as the dust on your carpet is drawn into the bag of your vacuum cleaner. The wing rises in defiance of gravity. If its lift is sufficient, it carries the rest of the airframe along with it into the sky. A sail experiences the same forces as a wing, but in order to translate their effect into the desired result, something happens which is more complicated than flight. In order to fathom what is going on, we need to take a closer look at the sail as an aerofoil. A well-cut sail that is properly set cuts the air cleanly. The lift it is generating acts at an angle of 90 to a line joining its luff and its leech. Its maximum curvature, or camber, is about 40% of the way aft. This latter factor can vary, as we will be discussing in the next chapter, but it must never be in the after half of the sail. If that is allowed to occur, the aerofoil effect is disastrously impaired. So far so good, but we still havent answered the question as to why the boat is not simply sucked into the direction of the lift of her sail. The reason lies in her keel, which supplies the vital element of lateral resistance. A well-designed sailing craft has absolutely no interest in going sideways. When the diagonal force from the rig arrives at the keel, it undergoes a process of resolution into two bask components. One pulls athwartships, the other forwards. Depending on the set of the sail, the forward component is frequently much smaller than its athwartships counterpart, but because the capacity of the keel for resisting this is so great, and any reluctance to move ahead is diminutive, the vessel slides forward through the water.
Resolving the force of a sail. The diagonal force of a sail can be reduced to 2 component forces, one forward and one athwartships. (a) Close-hauled the sideways force outweighs the forward one. (b) Freed off with the sail sheeted well out, the forward component is the greater.
Running
When the boat has turned far enough from the wind to place it on her quarter, you wont be able to ease the sheets any more on a conventional yacht. The main is pressed against the shrouds, and the headsail will flop about in its wind shadow. At this point the mainsail is beginning to stall. There is nothing to be done about this but you can console yourself with the knowledge that, because it is squared right away, whatever drive it is managing to deliver will be entirely in a forward direction. Coping with the jib on a run will be described in Chapter 4. You should resist the temptation to oversheet the main in order to keep it clear of the shrouds. It isnt doing itself any measurable damage. So long as it is vanged well down, the small amount of chafe will be an acceptable trade-off for nor spoiling the trim of the boat. As you steer her further downwind, there comes a time when the breeze will be all. The boat is now on a dead run. No vessel has ever enjoyed this point of sail, not even one with a single square sail, because there is now no aerofoil effect left at all. Unless there is a lot of breeze, this leaves the rig feeling sloppy and makes for slow progress with heavy, unrestrained rolling thrown in as a bonus. In spite of the negative features of running, there are times when it is unavoidable. Techniques for surviving it are discussed in Chapter 4. In a fore-and-aft-rigged craft such as a modern yacht, the danger of an accidental gybe must be appended to the list of miseries endured on a run. Even with the boat dead before the wind, her main boom must be over one side or the other. Nominally it must be to leeward, except that there is no lee side on a run. If the boom is to starboard and you allow the wind to creep around towards the starboard quarter, the boom will then be on the weather, or windward, side. This is an unstable state, and unless the boom is restrained by a preventer it may slam violently across the boat, settling the account for the treatment you have given it. From time to time you will be obliged to turn the boats stern through the wind. A gybe will then be inevitable, but since you will have planned it, it can be controlled (see Chapter 4) and need be no more dangerous than your morning coffee. Swallow that in one gulp and youll burn your throat. Sip it, and itll set you up for the rest of the day.
Close-hauled sailing
If you start out with your boat sailing on a beam reach and bring her up steadily towards the wind, youll be trimming your sails progressively towards the fore-and-aft line. Somewhere around 45 from the wind youll find that the sails wont come in any further. At this point you are close-hauled. If you try to steer above a close-hauled course the luffs of your sails will collapse, or lift, and the yacht will slow down. She will also begin to go sideways as the forward component of her sails diminishes to near zero. Conversely, if you sail the boat below (or downwind of) a close-hauled course with the sails sheeted hard in, she will heel excessively and slow down. It is therefore up to the helmsman to steer a close-hauled boat precisely in the correct groove. It is he who presents the rig at the desired angle to the wind, or who causes it to lift or stall. This is what defines the difference between close-hauled sailing and any other situation. Once the sheet trimmers have set the sails close-hauled they can do no more, except in terms of detail, which well consider later on.
Sailing to windward
When you are presented with a destination to the windward side of a close-hauled course, you wont be able to fetch it directly. The answer is well known. You must tack, or beat towards it. The art of carrying out this basic process of zig-zagging, however, takes a lot of learning, and the variation in performance between a skilled operator and a novice can be remarkable. Fortunately, with a modern yacht as your vehicle, there need be no doubt that you will achieve your end. The only question will be how long it takes you to get there. At its simplest, the process goes like this: sheet in your sails, then see which tack offers the greater gain towards where you hope to go. Steer the yacht so that she is as near the close-hauled groove as you can get her. Sail on until your destination lies abeam. This is as close as you will be able to approach on that tack, so you should now go about. If your boat is performing well you will find that you can sail right to your chosen spot close-hauled. Often, youll be congratulating yourself that youll arrive shortly, only to find that a wind shift leaves you groping. When this happens, dont pinch the boat too close to the wind. It almost never pays, just keep steering so as to present the rig at the correct angle to the breeze, as before: bring the boat slightly too close to the wind (sails lifting) and bear away a degree or two. If you fail to make it on this tack, flop over again when your harbour mouth, or buoy, or that continent somewhere over the horizon, is abeam. Youll get there in the end. The strategies for tacking towards a distant windward objective will be discussed in Chapter 21. Sailors used to talk of working a boat to windward. This was a description they instinctively bestowed on the business, and they were right. The fact that a vessel can be moved in direct opposition to the source of her motion is a miracle that should never be taken for granted, even though it is far easier to execute in a modern yacht than ever it was in the working craft from which they are ultimately derived. None the less, as soon as our evening watering hole slips tantalisingly into the windward sector of the horizon, we are on our mettle. Any fool can reach around the seas, but it takes a sailor to beat efficiently.
3. Efficient Sailing
Sails today are very different from their ancestors in the period before the polyester revolution. Shape has always been the most important factor in sail efficiency, and time was when you chose your most suitable canvas for the conditions, pulled it up and sheeted it in. Some cruising sails are still made like this. They work well enough, but the cloth from which they are cut often means that their performance potential is nowhere near that of a modern sail whose geometry can be modified to suit the wind and sea. Such equipment has worked its way into cruisers following the lead set by racing yachts, whose hi-tech vanguard has now moved on to cloths of such sophistication and stability that the shape cut into their sails is barely compromised until they literally burst. We have seen in Chapter 2 that the maximum camber of a sail should be somewhat forward of the middle of its cross-section. In practice this varies to a degree with what sort of sail it is and how hard the wind is blowing. The power of an aerofoil depends upon its depth of curvature, so a baggy sail will drive you along in light airs far more effectively than a flat one. As the breeze hardens, the power of the full-cut sail will become too great for the boat. It must then be flattened or reefed, if either is possible; or changed for a different sail if not. This requirement is underlined by the fact that as the wind increases, a sail naturally becomes fuller and the point of maximum camber is blown aft towards the leech. Both these results are the opposite of what is desirable, and something must be done to mitigate them. In addition to the question of camber control, there is also the matter of twist. Most sails twist away from the wind in their upper sections. This tendency is built into them deliberately and can be controlled so that it works to your advantage. Twist is a shut book to many sailors, but to ignore it will measurably compromise your boat speed. The reason for its importance is this: wind blows more strongly aloft than near the deck, because surface friction with the sea slows it down. When a boat sails along, the wind she actually experiences is a composite known as apparent wind. She may be powered by a true wind from abeam, but she is making a ghost breeze from dead ahead in an equal and opposite direction to her own progress through the flowing air. This phantom combines with the true wind to generate the actual breeze across the sails. The apparent wind which they form comes from further ahead and is stronger than the true wind, so long as it is not blowing from well abaft the beam.
The apparent wind is greater than the true wind and blows from further ahead
Clearly, the faster the true wind for a given boat speed, the less will be the interference caused by the boats movement. Because the true wind aloft is a little stronger than at deck level, the apparent wind up there is somewhat more free than the air lower down. If the upper part of the sail can be twisted to take advantage of this, its resultant force (Chapter 2) will produce a larger forward component than that being delivered by the lower section of the same area of canvas. Furthermore, the whole of the sail will be setting cleanly, with no part either lifting or stalling, In the case of a fractional rig, the upper section of the mainsail cuts undisturbed air, while the lower parts receive their wind already bent further aft by the headsails. Twist control is vital if the top of the headsail is not to be stalled completely. Too much twist can generate a fearsome loss of power if it is allowed to go unchecked while you are reaching on a windy day. The boom kicks up in disgust, while the tipper third of the mainsail dumps its air unceremoniously to leeward over its tortured leech.
Genoa twist. (a) Sheet lead too far forward: leech is tight and lower tell-tale lifts before the others. (b ) Sheet lead too far aft: foot is tight and upper tell-tale lifts before the others. (c) Sheet lead just right: all tell-tales work in unison.
Sheet-lead positions are crucial. When the helmsman brings the sail a little too close to the wind from close-hauled or a close reach, the luff should lift evenly all the way up. If the bottom of the luff lifts first, the lead is too far forward, making the leech too tight so that the sail is not twisting enough. If the top goes first, there is too much twist, caused by the lead being too far aft. The best position can only be found by experiment, but luff tell-tales are a tremendous help. If you dont have any, install them now. All you need are three 20 cm lengths of wool pushed through the sail with a sail needle, about 15 cm abaft the luff (in a 35-footer) and knotted on both sides. The windward ones will always flick up just before the sail lifts. If the leeward ones go dancing they tell you without room for argument that the sail has stalled either from oversheeting on a reach, or because the person steering the boat to windward is driving her to leeward of her best course.
Sail combinations
Una-rigged craft often sail excellently. A single, well-shaped aerofoil set from a lightly stayed or unstayed mast can be shaped with great precision and can be remarkably closewinded. Two notable examples of the truth of this are the Finn dinghy and the North American cat boat. As yachts become larger, a single sail becomes a worse proposition for reasons of handling and of shipping a spar of sufficient proportions to carry it. From time immemorial, therefore, sail plans have been divided. In addition to the benefits above, split rigs offer two further advantages. Because individual sails are set forward and abaft the centre of lateral resistance (CLR) about which the boat effectively pivots, they can be sheeted so as to balance her steering characteristics. At speeds too low for the rudder to be useful, the sails can even be used to persuade the vessel to point where you want her to go. Secondly, the slot between two sails produces a venturi effect, accelerating the air which is squeezed through it. This raised velocity increases the power not only of the rig as a whole but also of its individual components. Those who doubt that this is happening have only to stand in the slot of a yacht sailing to windward in 15 knots of breeze. Tell them to hang on to their hats, though. Its breezier in there than theyd ever have believed back in the cockpit.
Sail balance. (a) Too much headsail: boat carries lee helm and wants to turn off the wind. (b ) Too much mainsail: boat carries weather helm and wants to round up into wind. (c) Perfect combination: main and headsail well balanced, boat carries slight weather helm.
As skipper, you have the balance of the boats rig at your fingertips, and assuming that she is well designed, there is plenty you can do about it . The yacht should be easy and light to steer, showing a gentle tendency to turn into the wind if left to her own devices. If she has too much mainsail on and only a small jib, a sloop will want to round up. The result is weather helm. This tires the unfortunate who must steer, as well as slowing the vessel down through the drag of the rudder. The dreaded lee helm, on the other hand, is the lot of the sailor whose boat is carrying too much canvas forward and too little aft. Lee helm is a dismal condition. It makes manoeuvring difficult, steering frustrating, and it has a debilitating effect on the yachts capacity to sail close to the wind without making excessive leeway. A touch of weather helm holds the rudder a degree or two to leeward, which diverts the flowing water, just enough to help the keel lift the vessel in opposition to the sideways forces. Lee helm achieves the converse effect.
Hull balance
In addition to the disposition of her sail plan, a yachts helm balance varies depending on how much she is heeling. As she heels to leeward, any tendency to weather helm will increase. Rolling to windward generates lee helm. This makes sense when you consider that the whole outfit is being pulled along by the rig. As the boat heels, the centre of effort of the mast and sails moves outboard. If you dragged the boat through the water by a rope on the end of a beam lashed athwartships across her deck, she would try to swing away from that side. The same thing happens with the rig. Boats with flat, beamy midships sections such as are found in many high performance modern cruisers and racers suffer from a more subtle source of heel-induced weather helm. As they lean over, the leeward side of the immersed hull becomes rounded to a point of exaggeration. The weather side is correspondingly flattened. The imbalance produces weather helm which, in certain cases, appears suddenly and uncontrollably above a critical angle of heel. You need to watch out for this in such a vessel, particularly if you are sailing in a river on a gusty day, surrounded by expensive moored yachts.
Shortening sail
Shortening sail as the wind strengthens is part of the sailors everyday life. It is not something to be put off. The process should be as natural as shifting gears in the family car. Not only does carrying the right canvas far the conditions give you a drier ride and increase your chances of arriving with the boat in one piece, it keeps the yacht more upright. As we have just discussed, the less a boat is heeling, the easier she will be on the helm. This benefit is assisted by the fact that the centre of effort of a smaller headsail or a reefed genoa is further forward than that of a larger one. Similarly, a reef in the mainsail moves the leech inboard along the boom. The sails are therefore generating less weather helm than if the yacht were spreading everything she carried. With a sensible awareness of the principles of sail balance in your mind, it isnt difficult to reduce your canvas in such a way that the boats behaviour remains docile. It would be unwise to generalise about where to begin sail reductions. A masthead cruising sloop will usually set out by tying one reef into the mainsail. This may be followed by one or two changes of headsail before going for the second reef, and so on. A fractional-rigger often reduces the size of her headsail first. A ketch or yawl has a mizzen to consider as well, but the principles remain the same. The years since the mid-1970s have seen the rapid rise and general acceptance of patent reefing systems. The best of those offered for headsail roller reefing have by now achieved high reliability and are able to reef the sail to a moderate degree without too much sacrifice in shape. Poorer gears produce a dismally reefed sail which looks more like a flour bag than a number 3 genoa. With the canvas rolled away to storm jib size the result is execrable. None the less, all such arrangements give the benefit of instant sail area adjustment. In a short-handed craft this sometimes more than compensates for what is lost in pure performance. No boat must go to sea, however, without making at least some arrangements for the day when the gear fails. The most satisfactory answer is a separate forestay that can be readily set up and to which a storm jib may be hanked. Indeed, this produces the best of all worlds because such a jib will invariably set better than the deeply rolled genoa. It can therefore be used routinely for heavy weather sailing. Mainsail reefing systems now exist which are way in advance of the old round-the-boom roller reefing. Such a method was never ideal on the Bermudan rig, though it remained in use for decades. By far the simplest and best way to reef the main is with slab reefing, as described in Chapter 4, but if you cannot bring yourself to make even that much effort, in-mast and in-boom systems can be bought off the shelf. In-mast gears put considerable weight aloft and add to the awful sum of the rigs windage. They may or may not be reliable, and a sail built for such a set-up will probably have a straight leech with no battens. On a contemporary rig this looks downright sad and its certainly less powerful than the elliptical trailing edge of the conventional mainsail. The Spitfire didnt have those beautiful wings just to look pretty. Mainsail reefing options therefore subdivide into three choices: in-mast roller, in-boom or round-boom roller, and traditional gear for reducing the sail in slabs at the foot. Of the three, slab produces by far the best sail shape; its extremely reliable and, in any case, is readily repaired at sea. Mainsails of under 50 square metres are easily handled by two healthy adults and can be dealt with single-handed without major inconvenience. To compromise this vital sail out of laziness or lack of stomach for getting wet seems odd to me, especially when the latest fully battened mainsails and lazy-jack systems make the job of stowing childs play. Nonetheless, the roller alternatives do have a place. They help huge yachts to be run without numerous deck-hands. They also enable the elderly or the unfit to keep on enjoying their cruising, but if these options are to be chosen, its important to be aware of their limitations in sail shape and, potentially, their unreliability. At least an in-boom reeling system is within reach in the event of failure. Furthermore, the mainsail has a conventional halyard and can always be dropped. Although in-mast systems have improved greatly, they still represent a total commitment to the dependability of the gear. A trip to the masthead in a gale holds little appeal for any of us.
Cruising chutes
Todays Bermudan-rigged yachts have much in their favour, but sailing downwind in light and moderate going is not one of them. Ideally, this endemic shortfall is cured by using a spinnaker, but this lies beyond the comfort zone of many cruising sailors. The answer is a cruising chute. This has been developed from the modern asymmetric racing spinnaker and is really a light, extra-full genoa that only attaches at tack, head and clew. It works in airs too gentle for a multi-purpose genoa, and can be set on a very broad reach without a pole. Sailmakers will deliver them complete with a snuffer a sort of sleeve which rolls down over the sail, spilling its wind miraculously. This removes the worry from using so powerful a tool. In short, a downwind passage in light weather without a chute is like the proverbial day without sunshine.
Tacking
In my years as a Yachtmaster Examiner I have perched on the sterns of numerous craft to watch their crews put them about. In a protracted short-tacking session, such as occurs when beating up a river, a poor helmsman can exhaust the winch-winders after a few turns. The way he does it is this: as the riverbank comes galloping up he bawls, Ready aboutlee-ho! in his saltiest voice, then he jams the helm hard over. The boat flips through the wind with the crew struggling to clear a jammed sheet. The boat is allowed to go on turning until she is well below a close-hauled course on the new tack. The crew havent even begun to wind in the sheet, so they are now left with a genoa full of wind. By the time they have laboriously ground it in, the skipper is singing out again, Ready about. They groan, and the sloppy proceedings are repeated over and over until Hadrian on the port winch feels a bad twinge in his thoracic region. I say, skipper, he mutinies, already blue in the face, if we dont start motoring shortly youll be hearing from my executors. The mistake, of course, is that the boat is not being creatively steered. It isnt enough just to bang her over from one tack to the next. The helmsman should sail her as quickly as possible from full on one tack, through the wind and begin bearing away, but he should stop her turning a degree or two before she fills on the new tack. On all but the largest vessels the crew can then whip most of the sheet in using the winch as no more than a snubbing device. The last metre is wound home as the helmsman hears away on to his course. Tacking like this requires little energy and loses far less ground than the other method, but it does need a thinking person on the helm. Watch the crew, encourage them to hit the sheet at just the right moment, and dont let the yacht slow down too much. If you do, shell stall, and youll end up with the deaded lee helm until shes worked up enough pace to slot back into the groove. It shouldnt be necessary to back a headsail in a normal tack on a well-designed boat. Doing so slows her down and usually makes sheeting-in more like hard work as well. The technique should only be employed as a last resort, or when to miss stays would have such truly catastrophic results that you need to be a hundred per cent certain of getting her round.
Gybing
Gybing has a bad reputation. Some people will even turn through 270 to avoid it. The reasons for this are obvious, yet so long as the manoeuvre is decently executed, they need carry no weight. In a modern yacht, a gybe should be an innocuous affair. There is an essential difference between gybing from one tack to the other and going about to achieve a similar end. In the gybe the stern passes through the eye of the wind. Since a fore-and-aft rigged mainsail will not feather with the wind aft, it must be full throughout the manoeuvre. At some point, it changes instantaneously from being full on one side to being full on the other. At this moment, if it is uncontrolled, it will fly across the boat, carrying its boom with it. There are three possible consequences of this and none are desirable. The least damaging is that no harm comes to the ship, but the crews nerves are shredded. The middle ground, depending on your point of view, is that some part of the vessel usually the boom, the gooseneck, or a running backstay carries away. The greatest horror is that the boom cracks a skull which it finds in its path; very likely it will complete the job by dunking its victim overboard. The bigger the vessel, the greater the dangers accruing from an unintentional gybe unintentional, mark you, and therefore uncontrolled. The good skipper lays all these nasties to rest by the simple expedient of hauling the mainsheet in before gybing. Put your best helmsman on duty and get him to run dead downwind. Now heave the sheet in until the boom is more or less amidships. Take a turn on the cleat, winch or, if the sheet is jammed off, to a cam-cleat in its bottom block, make it fast with that. If the yacht has running backstays, make them both up, then let off the new leeward one. The helmsman now carefully brings the stern of the yacht through the wind so that the leech of the main flops across. As it does so the sheet is surged quickly away. The helmsman will do well to apply a momentary dose of weather helm the instant after the boom comes across, because the whole steering geometry of the boat will be reversing, and if he doesnt, the yacht will try to gripe up towards the wind. All boats do this, though some are much worse than others. Once the boom is squared away, then, and only then, can you order up your new course. During the whole gybing process, the vessel should have deviated from a dead run only by the few degrees it took to bring the breeze from one side of the stern to the other. One final warning about gybing: its easy to become lazy about cleating off the mainsheet traveller, if you have one. When the boom comes across in a gybe, the car will crash across the boat like a guillotine if its progress is not checked. Should anyones fingers be in the way, there will be only the skipper to blame for the resulting amputation. Before you set up for a gybe, check the traveller. If you have more than one sail set on a boom, as you would on a ketch, for example, you should obviously deal with both sails as you would with the main on a sloop or cutter. What you elect to do with any headsails (except a spinnaker) is less critical, so long as you do not let them blow around the forestay. If you are short-handed, by far the best answer to a headsail which is not poled out (see below) is to do nothing with it at all until the mainsail is well and truly gybed. Once that is out of the way, you can attend to the genoa by passing it across the boat from sheet to sheet. By maintaining some tension on the old sheet until the new one has taken over, the whole business will pass so smoothly youll wonder what all the fuss was about and quite rightly too.
Heaving to
When you heave to, you manoeuvre your boat so that she loses all way, yet keeps het sails full for most of the time. There are all sorts of misapprehensions about heaving to. Some boats do it more successfully than others, but the basic principles are the same for any vessel. A sloop is brought to rest with the wind on whichever side is most expedient. Her headsail is sheeted aback and her mainsail is pinned well in to leeward. The headsail tries to push the bow off the wind while the main has an opposing effect. In a perfect world, the keel would balance one against the other so that equilibrium was attained. Unfortunately, life is not quite so simple. Left entirely to her own devices a boat set up in this way will fall so far off the wind that the mainsail fills and begins to drive her ahead. If the rudder were left amidships she might gather enough way to be a nuisance, so the helm is lashed to leeward to ensure that if she makes any way at all, she will try to head up into the wind. As soon as she is close enough for the mainsail to begin spilling, the push of the backed headsail stops any tendency to go ahead and she falls away until the main balances things up. The boat is now in a state of dynamic equilibrium and the helmsman can walk away from his job.
Heaving to. (a) Close-hauled. (b ) Tacking with headsail held to weather (sheet is not released). (c) Hove to: boat drifts slowly to leeward but makes little headway.
A yacht with a large mainsail, a small jib and a deep forefoot, such as a traditional gaff-rigged craft, will often heave to pointing 45 from the wind, and hence the seas. A short boom and a big genoa militate against such an ideal state of affairs, though by adjusting the sheets and understanding the effect each sail is likely to have, most boats can be persuaded to point up tolerably well. Although a vessel with no forefoot to speak of may not be able to use the manoeuvre as a heavy weather survival tactic, the practice of heaving to may still be helpful in short-handed cruising, particularly if the boat is not fitted with an autopilot. By now youll probably be asking what possible use heaving to can be during a sail change, since the very act of reducing mainsail area, or even temporarily removing a headsail, will destroy the balance on which everything depends. In the case of changing jibs, things may go awry, but at least you wont need a helmsman and the boat will lose all her liveliness once the jib is down. While you are reefing the main, your vessel may tend to fall off the wind, but the security of knowing that she isnt under way can sometimes make up for this disadvantage.
Reefing
Slab reefing has been in use for hundreds of years and hasnt ever been bettered. Todays gear has made what was a heavy task into a lightweight procedure which can, with practice, be executed in less than a minute. A method is the answer to getting it right. Fix the system in your mind and youll reef like clockwork, even on a dark night. Ease the sheet and let off the kicking strap or boom vang. Take the weight of the boom on the topping lift. Ease the halyard and hook the luff reef cringle onto the reefing horn at the forward end of the boom. If there is no horn, lash the cringle down with a few turns of line. Some craft are even arranged so that the tack is secured remotely from the cockpit. Set up the halyard. Pull down the clew pennant so that the leech cringle is snugly down on the boom and the foot of the sail is well hauled out. Yachts of any size are usually equipped with a winch for this job. It may be at the mast, on the boom, or in the cockpit (in which case the pennant will lead to it via a series of turning blocks). Some older boats use a tackle. If the pull is too hard for comfort, let the sheet right off for a few seconds so that the sail spills all its wind. Ease the topping lift, sheet in the sail, then set up the vang or kicker. You can now tie in the reef points if you feel its necessary. On a short-boomed masthead sloop you could sail round the world without ever doing this. On a long-footed traditional mainsail, failure to tie in the points is not merely untidy and unseamanlike, it may sometimes compromise the security of the boom itself. Generally speaking, points should not be tied around the boom. Under the foot of the sail is better, if the canvas is attached to the spar by using a track and slides. Many of todays craft carry the sail in a groove in the boom. If yours is one of these, youve no choice but to tie up the points around the whole affair. Just be doubly careful when shaking out your reef that you never release the pennant without first taking off the ties. If you do, the weight of the sail and boom will come on to the eyelets of the reef points which were never designed for this purpose. They may survive if they are tied round the foot of the sail, but if they are round the boom the extra rigidity can damage the cloth. Never try to tie in points with the boom banging about; always sheet in first. Trim the jib (or let draw if you have been hove to) and sail on. The process of reefing is carried out in about 20 seconds on a 12 metre (38 ft) racing yacht. In a family cruiser it should not take more than a minute or so if you are not tying in the points.
Reefing. (a) Ease sheet, let off boom vang and heave up on topping lift. (b ) Ease halyard, hook on reef tack cringle then set up halyard again.
(c) Crank down clew, with a winch if necessary. (d) Let off topping lift, set up boom vang and let the sail draw.
Single-line reefing
This is slab-reefing refined by sophisticated gear inside the boom, so that by easing the halyard and winching down a single line in the cockpit, tack and clew are hove down together. Fine in theory and grand at its best, such arrangements are often let down by cheap rope and poor turning blocks, resulting in a no-win stretch binge that precludes a decent sail shape in high winds. Shaking reefs out can be akin to a session in the gym because the friction hinders the pennant running out of the boom end. Single-line reefing also leaves you with an unconscionable length of rope in the cockpit, and it usually means you cant have three reefs in the mainsail. Say no more
Headsail changes
With the establishment of the roller reefing genoa, headsail changes are less of a daily chore than they used to be for most people. None the less, some sailors still prefer to keep a selection of well-setting jibs and genoas. Switching from one to the next is such a simple, logical process that no comment is required, except to reiterate the necessity for taking off way before venturing out of the cockpit and the desirability of changing down in good time. If you have a large headsail set and you anticipate trouble in dropping it, the final solution is to run the boat downwind for a few seconds at the crucial moment Bear away on to a broad-enough reach to place the genoa into the lee of the mainsail. This will neutralise all its homicidal tendencies. Sheet the genoa in hard behind the main to make certain that it cannot kick around and endanger the foredeck brigade. Go forward, drop the sail and secure it. You can now bring the boat back on course if you have a mind to. She wont go nearly so fast under mainsail only, and her motion will be considerably eased.
No brakes
The most important elements of boat handling revolve around the various circumstances in which you may want to stop, or get under way. The only thing that can stop a sailing vessel other than the undesirable intervention of a rock, shoal or quay wall is her own skin friction and air resistance. Acting against these are two forces which induce her to keep moving: the forward drive of her sails and her own momentum. You can shed the first of these easily enough if you think about what you are doing. Momentum depends upon such variables as how fast you are going when the power comes off, and how much air resistance is stacking up against it. It also depends upon the displacement and hull form of your vessel. For a given craft these latter two criteria are, of course, fixed. Their effects are predictable once you know her habits, and they are generally referred to as the manner in which she carries her way. An old-fashioned, heavy yacht seems to keep going for ever if she is luffed up to a lightish breeze from 5 or 6 knots. I have seen an Eight Metre carry her way, head-to-wind, for more than 100 metres. She finally stopped with her mooring right under her spoon bow. The bowman was lying on the foredeck ready to stretch down, pick it up and secure it. At the other end of the scale come ultra-light trailer-sailers. I once luffed one of these up to a mooring in a strong breeze during a period of my life when I was usually sailing a 6 ton fin-keeler. I didnt expect the boat to go far, but she stopped dead miles short of the buoy so that I had to tack back up to it for my next try. Clearly, judgement is required to bring your yacht to a standstill right where you want her. Fortunately for most of us who are blessed with a higher degree of mortality than my Eight Metre skipper, we can keep the judgement factor to a minimum by making sure that before we take the power off, by dropping the sails, easing the sheets, or luffing head-to-wind, we line up with rule number one: When manoeuvring under sail, always go as slowly as you possibly can without losing control. However, well go into this in more detail later in this chapter. Before even beginning to think about the boat, you need to be aware of what is going on around her. You need an accurate lead on the wind direction, and you need to determine the relationship between this and any tidal stream or current. Get either of these wrong and you may as well have bought a motor boat. Happily, being right is just a matter of informed observation.
Wind awareness
We have seen in Chapter 3 that when the true wind is blowing across a moving boat, the apparent wind which results is affected not only in strength but also in direction. It always comes from forward of the true wind until the boat is on a dead run. With the wind well aft, the apparent wind speed will be less than the true wind. As it approaches a point just abaft the beam they may become similar, and as the true wind comes onto or forward of the beam, the force of the apparent wind will always exceed it. It follows that if you want any accurate information about the true wind, it is no good looking at the burgee, the wind indicator or your instruments. You are sailing (or motoring for that matter) in the apparent wind which is being experienced by every item on board, from the ensign through your own senses right up to the fanciest electronic transducer. Other than a linked function computer, only your eyes can tell you what you want to know, which, when you consider that they didnt cost you a cent, represents remarkable value. Where there is no current, moored yachts will be lying head-up to the true wind. If there is a flag ashore, you can check that, but a far more accurate device is available at all times when there is light to see it. As the wind blows on the face of the water, it marks it with tiny ripples which run at right angles to its direction. Dont use the waves to judge. They may be being bent by other forces. Just use the ripples. Train yourself to be aware of them at all times. Theyll never let you down.
Tide awareness
When it comes to boat handling, the one thing you do not do if you want to gauge the tide is consult the tide tables. Look at any fixed object with water flowing past it, including a moored or anchored vessel, and youll see a bow-wave. That tells you all you need to know. If you are running up a river and theres nothing around that will indicate whether or not the tide has turned, you can often put the boat beam on to the direction of the river and see which way she is being set by observing the bank dead ahead of you. The answer should be immediately obvious, even if you are turning in your own length. If its not, you can only conclude that it is slack water.
Sailing slowly
Shortening sail If youre going to sail into a crowded harbour, or up a narrow river on a breezy day, it will probably pay to shorten sail before you get there. Manoeuvrability is severely restricted by a large genoa, as is visibility. So get rid of it, either by rolling half of it away, or by changing it for a smaller, higher-cut sail. Reef the main if necessary, but have nothing to do with your genoa, except on the gentlest of days. Although shortening down can be helpful, it doesnt pay to be overzealous. The wind may be lighter in the harbour than out at sea and a boat which is grossly undercanvassed can be a disappointment to handle. She may even let you down. Dropping one sail altogether is often a winner if your rig will balance without it. A gaff cutter will sail slowly without her all-powerful staysail, so long as there is a jib on the end of the bowsprit. Ketches and yawls may go well enough with main or mizzen stowed, and so on. The only way to know is to experiment with the boat in question. Spilling wind So long as the wind is forward of the beam, you can control your speed perfectly by easing sheets until the sails spill wind. If you try this close-hauled youll go sideways as your speed drops, so be careful. When the breeze is on or abaft the beam, a conventional yacht cant lose any way with her mainsail set. The boom presses on the shrouds even with the sheet slacked right off, and the sail fills just the same. In marginal cases it helps to dump the kicking strap or boom yang, allowing the upper part of the leech to fall away. The result of this feature of mainsails is that if you ever need to stop with the wind from aft, you have no choice but to drop the mainsail and proceed under headsails, spilling wind as necessary. This becomes important when manoeuvring in tides. Oversheeting As a temporary expedient in light or moderate airs, you can sometimes shed way by sheeting the sails in so hard that they lose all drive. This technique can be quite useful, but it must be treated with caution because it can play havoc with the balance of your helm. Scandalising Another way of ditching drive from a main or mizzen is to scandalise it. This shocks the sail into a state of refusal by doing something really horrible to it. Let the kicker or vang right off, overhaul the mainsheet to the knot, then drag the boom end skywards with the topping lift.
Mooring under sail no tide. Approach on a close reach, spilling wind to control speed. Luff off the last of your way and pick up the buoy on your lee bow.
When you arrive immediately downwind of the buoy, let the sheets off altogether and luff, ensuring that the person on the foredeck knows which side to pick up. Actually, the ideal state is to remain slightly below head-to-wind and pick up between the stem and the leeward chainplates. Dont forget that if you have lost rather too much way the boat may refuse to luff if asked with the helm alone. If this happens, be ready to haul in the mainsheet to give her a leg up. Some craft will execute this manoeuvre under mainsail only. This is a desirable characteristic because the people on the foredeck wont be beaten around the ears by an unruly jib clew. Wind with tide The principle is the same here as where there is no stream, except that when the boat is moored she will still be moving relative to the water flowing by. You dont, therefore, have to luff to a standstill. You have only to bring your speed down to that of the tide, which makes life considerably easier, as you retain control of the boat throughout the manoeuvre. With the no-tide situation, control diminishes to zero when you lose the last of your way.
Mooring under salt wind with tide, Approach the buoy on a close reach, crabbing across the tide and checking way by spilling wind. Use transits to ensure you are not swept downtide. Come head to tide for the pick-up.
The only drawback is the requirement to exercise more judgement in order not to end up hopelessly downtide of your destination, but this possibility can often be obviated by making use of a transit. Line the mooring buoy up with a suitable object in its background, so that the two remain in line as you approach on your close, reach. You are then guaranteed to arrive at the right place. If they start moving relative to one another, you can correct with sheet, helm or both. This system of observing and rectifying any sideways motion holds good right across the whole boat handling agenda. As we shall see, it is also of vital importance in pilotage, collision avoidance and, to a lesser extent, navigation. A sailor without a transit to assist his daily chores is like a radio with a broken aerial. Wind against tide The only satisfactory way to stop a boat in relation to a mooring, a dock or just the seabed (if you were coming to anchor) is to bring her in uptide. If you approach a buoy with the tide behind you, it will be necessary to make a sternboard equal to the speed of the stream before you can stop. Even if you were able to achieve this, the effort involved far outweighs any conceivable benefits.
Mooring under sail wind against tide. Come on to a close reach and drop the mainsail. Approach the buoy from an upwind/downtide position, controlling way by spilling wind or rolling away part of the headsail. Lose the last of your way alongside the buoy.
The result of this immutable fact is that, when you are picking up a buoy with the wind blowing against the stream or current, you must approach it downwind. Since you cannot control downwind boat speed with the mainsail up, you have no choice but to stow it and come to the mooring under headsail alone. The manoeuvre is now a push-over. You can work the headsail sheet like an accelerator pedal in your car and produce whatever speed you need to creep along. The only complication comes if it is blowing hard. Then you may find that the flogging sail is generating so much windage that it drags you along too quickly, even with the sheet eased right away. If so, youll have to roll up most of the sail and use the furling line as well as the sheet. If you dont have a roller reefer, drop the sail well down the stay, then have the foredeck crew hold its leech out to catch as much wind as you need. If even that is too much sail, you have no choice but to blow down on to the buoy under bare poles and grab it as you go by. You can do no more Wind across tide If youre lucky youll find yourself in a position to close-reach up to your mooring with the tide right on your nose. This is the best of all possible worlds. Often, though, the facts confronting you are less ideal. With the breeze somewhat abaft the beam, it may be obvious that you must treat the manoeuvre as a wind against tide pick-up. Sometimes, the situation is just plain ambiguous. Whenever you are not clear which it is, or on any occasion when the wind is unsteady in direction and may shift so as to embarrass you, apply the second great maxim of boat handling: When in doubt, drop that mainsail . Most modern yachts will jog along merrily enough without it, and once it is stowed, your chances of a serious debacle are reduced by a quantum jump.
Leaving a mooring
If you treat leaving a mooring with the same logic as when picking it up, all will be well. Beware of the wind against tide situation and if in doubt, dont hoist the main until you are clear of the buoy and sailing free. If you can do it, sail away with main only, so as to give the foredeck crew an easier ride, but if there is a necessity to be on a particular tack when you leave, hoist the jib and be ready to back it if need be, so as to ensure that the boat pays off the way you want her to go.
Anchoring
The same principles apply to the boat handling side of anchoring. There is, however, considerably more to it, so anchoring will be discussed separately in Chapter 8.
Berthing
There is nothing magical about sailing alongside. The only difference between this and picking up a mooring is that in the former case you grab a buoy that you hope is within reach on the lee bow, while in the latter you grab a dock or pontoon beside which the yacht is more or less stopped. The same systems are utilised for coping with various combinations of wind and current, with the added complication that if the wind is blowing strongly towards the dock, you will not want to sweep the quay with your main boom. The answer is: when in doubt, drop the main. Have plenty of fenders rigged, and make sure you have a stopping rope ready (Chapter 7) in addition to the normal dock lines. Go slow, dont be shy, adhere to all the basic rules and never forget boat handling maxim number three which states: Never enter any tight corner without having an escape route ready in case your affairs do not develop as you hoped they might. If the wind is blowing either along or off the berth, sailing out will present no difficulties. Just sort out the wind and tide combinations and use the jib alone if the mainsail wont spill wind while you are still tied up. It may even pay to turn a smallish yacht end-for-end in order to present her to the conditions at a more desirable angle. All of this is perfectly straightforward. The time you may experience difficulty is if the wind is blowing on to the dock, making it a lee shore. No boat can ever pull herself off a lee shore under sail alone. It is a physical impossibility. If you find yourself in this position, there is nothing for it but to haul out using external assistance. This may be from a friend who will give you a pluck off the wall, or you may be able to manage from your own resources. Ideally, you will tie your bow to a mooring or stake situated to seaward. You may even be able to warp yourself across the river, if your boat is tied to one bank. If none of these tidy solutions presents itself, you must lay out your kedge and haul off using that. Once you are clear of the lee shore, sailing out the anchor is usually an easy matter.
Pivoting
Unlike a motor vehicle, a boat is not guided by the movement of anything at her front end. Whatever force is making her turn, as we have seen when discussing sail balance, she pivots about her centre of lateral resistance. This is just as true under power as it is under sail. It means, amongst other things, that if your vessel is lying alongside a dock you will never work her off it tidily by shoving the helm over and motoring ahead. Before her bow can swing out, her stern must swing in. Somehow, the bow must be persuaded to come off the wall. Pushing off is the obvious way but there are others which we shall explore later. If the yacht is moving ahead and you need to steer close around an obstruction, or avoid an imminent collision, it is vital to remember the question of pivoting. Many buoys or piles have been struck by the stern of a vessel as her helmsman turned her helm the wrong way, thinking that he was steering away from it, when all the time he was swinging the stern inexorably into danger.
Blowing off
When you bring a yacht to rest beam-on to the wind, her bow will invariably blow off downwind, as the boat pivots around her keel. How fast or how far this happens varies from boat to boat, but you can bank on it with complete certainty.
Turning. When a yacht turns, she pivots around her keel: the bow goes one way and the stern the other.
With the boat moving well through calm water there will be no discernible tendency to blow off except in the hardest cross-winds because the keel is biting the water and doing its job, just as it is when she is sailing. It is only as the vessel slows down to stalling speed that the keel loses its dynamic efficiency and the bow blows away. If you are losing way in a final approach, its important to realise that this will happen and make any arrangements that may be necessary either to allow for it or to counteract it before the effects become embarrassing.
Rudder effect
When a boat is moving ahead, the action of the rudder is obvious. On moving astern, however, the situation is less clear. Theoretically, you should stand looking aft when steering, then operate the wheel or tiller so that the rudder is pointing in the direction you want the stern to swing. As any owner of a longkeeled yacht will tell you, life is not often that simple. A fin-keeler with a deep spade rudder will sometimes steer beautifully astern at very low speeds. Sadly, some boats refuse to steer astern at any price at all. The majority will agree to a compromise, but in order to give them a chance you must bear in mind all the forces which are acting upon the boat. The rudder is only one of them. If the propeller is placed immediately forward of the rudder (it should be, and often is), you can enjoy the benefit of being able to pivot your yacht around her turning point when she is not moving ahead at all. Put the helm hard over so that the rudder is acting as if you were going ahead. Now give her a solid blast full ahead for a few seconds. Unless she is very light, the yacht wont gather any appreciable way, but the surge of water thrown aft by the propeller will be hurled out sideways by the rudder blade. The stern will be thrown in the opposite direction. Because propellers are situated abaft the rudder in only the rarest of cases, this effect cannot be reproduced by giving the engine a burst astern. None the less, a strong kick in reverse will usually shunt the stern of a boat predictably one way or the other, but it is the propeller which is doing the work, not the rudder. The phenomenon goes under various names. We shall refer to it as propwalk.
Propeller effects
Water being driven off a revolving propeller comes away in a spiralling vortex. At all times this creates a certain amount of sideways force, though it becomes negligible when the boat is moving ahead above stalling speeds. When she is not under way, the results are noticeable and sometimes dramatic, particularly with the engine in reverse. Ahead, they are always masked by the effect of the rudder; astern, the rudder is ineffective until some speed has been built up, and even then the blade does not react on the water being thrown from the propeller. If you have the more common right-handed propeller, you will find that when the engine is put astern, the stern of the yacht will shunt across to port, and vice versa with a left-handed prop. On some craft this can be so positive that it becomes a primary manoeuvring tool; in others it is barely perceptible. What you need to determine by experiment is which way the stern will go and how hard. The best means of finding this out is to run the engine astern while you are tied up. A glance over both quarters will be enough to indicate on which side the turbulence is greatest. Freed of the dock, the boat would naturally shimmy her stern away from the disturbance. If you forget to find out while you are still in your berth, steer straight ahead in calm water, put the engine out of gear and let your way kill off. When you are nearly stopped, but before your head starts blowing about, put the propeller half astern and observe in which direction the boat tries to swing. Once youve stitched up the details of your propwalk, you have gone a long way to producing tidy power handling.
Moving ahead
If you want to turn tightly when you are moving ahead you have two choices: either you make the turn while carrying way or you do it with the gears engaged and the propeller throwing water over the rudder blade. The latter will generate a shorter turning circle the more power on, the smaller it will be but since you will probably find your vessel accelerating as you go round, youll need good nerves if you are surrounded by expensive yachts. Should you bottle out halfway round you may not make it, but carry on regardless and the bill will be heavier if your judgement proves shaky. The power turn is not for the faint-hearted, but in competent hands it can be a problem-solver.
The short turn. (a) Rudder hard over. A long burst ahead throws the stern as propwash hits the rudder. (b ) Going astern to prevent gathering way. Propwalk maintains the swing of the stem. (Note there is no need to move the rudder under normal circumstances If the yacht has a strong propeller torque.) (c) Another burst ahead. (d) Turn completed.
Motoring astern As weve noted already, some vessels do this readily while others seem determined to refuse. Generally, the longer the keel, the more difficult steering becomes when you are going the wrong way. The same, incidentally, holds good if you trying to sail backwards (sternboard) with your mainsail held aback by a muscular crew member. Moving astern successfully brings all your skills into play. You need to be aware of whether or not the yachts head will try to blow off, and if so, whether this effect will work with or against your propwalk. Propwalk is the over-riding consideration. It affects all boats until they have built up sufficient sternway for the rudder to counteract it. This can be anything from 1 to 5 knots. When it is over 3, my advice is to avoid going astern if at all possible. Once again, you need nerves like backstays to stick to your guns until you finally gain control, while an awkward gust of wind across the bows could leave you terminally embarrassed, for all your guts and bravado. The one thing you should always he able to predict is which way the yacht will swing. You may not be able to stop her doing it, but at least you wont be disappointed, and theres another point: if you know what shell do, you can often control circumstances to minimise, or even neutralise, the effects of her wickedness. If you know your boat will go on shoving her stern to starboard for 30 metres, try to give her a solid sheer the other way before you start. The two may have cancelled out by the time the rudder gets a grip. You can also sometimes turn a cross-wind into an ally, be it ever so fickle. A yacht whose stern gallops to port will try to throw her bow to starboard. When there is a stiff breeze on the starboard bow, her head will be trying to blow off to port. One force will help to neutralise the other. Try going astern in that boat with a gale on the port bow, however, and youll spin in your own length, do what you will.
Berthing
Mooring Picking up a mooring under power is the easiest of all manoeuvres. All you need remember is to head up into the tide, if there is any. If there isnt, head up into the wind. When in doubt, favour the tide. Looking at the other boats already moored will help decide which way to approach, but make sure they are of a similar configuration to yours. A light catamaran will scuttle about head-to-wind at the same time as a deep-keeled yacht seems unaware that the breeze is blowing at all. Anchoring As with the under sail chapter you will find what you need to know about anchoring in Chapter 8. Pile moorings Tying up between a pair of piles is a peculiarly British way of carrying on. Piles provide a stable and very safe way of keeping large numbers of boats lying fore-and-aft in the crowded, tide-swept rivers of the south. Piles psyche out the inexperienced operator in a big way. I kept my boat on piles for years and more often than not approaching strangers would attempt to tie up to me rather than pick up the empty visitors piles next door. Im afraid I gave them short shrift, not because Im a naturally unwelcoming sort of chap, but because it was unreasonable for my privacy to be invaded because of so needless a misconception. It is far easier to pick up a set of bare piles than it is to raft up to some unfortunate who got there first. All you have to do is to contrive two ropes in the right places. To tie up to another boat you need at least four lines, probably six. You must rig fenders, and after all that, you must still go through the usual social nonsense: Mind if we come alongside you? Sure, you wont be bothered if we leave at 0400 will you? So how do you perform this miracle on bare piles? Mirrors? The dinghy? A passing carrier pigeon? No. What you do is a running moor. Basically, this means that you drive up to the first pile, tie on to it, then drive up to the second, paying out rope from the first. When youre secured to that one as well, you shorten up aft and ease out forward until the boat is centred, and then you make fast. In practice there are one or two pitfalls into which the unwary may blunder. To avoid these, use the following step-by-step guide to the piles: Piles are invariably sited more or less along the axis of any tidal stream. They also carry mooring rings which can slide up and down a large, vertical iron horse. Make your approach uptide, if there is any; if there isnt, make it upwind. If the wind is blowing across the piles, approach from the downwind side of the first pile. Prepare your lines, paying particular attention to the stern line, which must be good and long. Some people like to run the ropes through the mooring rings and back on board, so as to be ready to let go by slipping them when the time comes to leave. If this is your choice (it isnt usually mine) youll need an even longer stern line. Nothing fouls up the whole business like running out of this vital rope. Watching people try to remember how to tie a double sheetbend as steam erupts from the skippers ears is good value, but is rarely rewarded with a successful result. Both ropes must be flaked clear to run. Your best knotter should now carry the working end of the stern line, correctly led through the aft guard rails, forward to the shrouds. Approach the downtide pile, stop with the shrouds alongside the mooring ring. You may feel you need a fender handy, but if you sail a black fishing boat you can forget about such finesse. It is axiomatic that you dont let this pile get abaft your boats pivot point while the crew are working on it. If you do, the boat will swivel round, the tide will come under her quarter, and all will he lost. Your only answer then is to abort and start again. Keep the boat fore-and-aft with the tide while your crew ties the stern line on to the ring on the pile. If they are not threading it through and back, the best knot for this is a round turn and a bowline (see Chapter 7 to find out why). With the stern line secure, motor slowly to the uptide pile, stop with your lee bow alongside (lee bow because then any wind will blow you on rather than off), secure, and drop back, evening up the lines as you go. The job is extremely easy in a boat of any size at all but if you dont feel you can cope with the dynamics, or your crew are all low on rope literacy, an equally safe alternative is to launch your dinghy, with the stern line aboard. The dinghy crew attach one end of this to the downtide pile in their own sweet time. You drive the yacht past it and secure her to the uptide pile, which presents no challenge at all. While you are doing this, the dinghy comes alongside and hands up the other end of the stern Fine. Even up when the bow is fast and thats the job.
Pile moorings. (a) Uptide approach, from the downwind side if appropriate. (b ) Hold the shoulder of the boat against the first pile and attach the stern line. (c) Move on to the upwind side of the uptide pile and attach the bow line, paying out slack on the stern line. (d) Even up the lines.
Piles should pose no problem to a reasonably competent skipper. Anyone who chickens out by rafting up needlessly should have his club tie snipped
Coming alongside
Corning alongside a berth is an everyday affair for most of us, yet its surprising how wired up people become about it. The answer is to analyse the various aspects, address each one in turn, form a simple plan of action, brief your crew carefully, then execute the manoeuvre steadily and positively. Proper use of warps is crucial to tying up alongside, so before we go any further, well take a look at exactly what each does, and why. The nuts and bolts of how they should be handled and made fast are dealt with in Chapter 7. Under most circumstances, a yacht of any size below 18 m (55 ft) or so is best tied up with four ropes. These are the bow line (or head rope), the stern line, the bow spring (or head spring) and the stern spring. Assuming the boat is head up to the tide or the wind is blowing along the dock, she will be secure enough lying to a bow line only, but she will not be tidy. She will lie bows-in to the dock, risking damage to her pulpit, and bow in general. Putting on a stern line which leads away aft will do little to remedy this situation. However, if you rig a stern spring from well aft to run out parallel to the bow line site will settle back on the pair of ropes and lit sweetly beside the dock. That is the theory. Of course, life is not so simple. She would lie adequately to the two lines so long as the tide were very strong, or if she were left motoring astern against them. Since the former is rarely the case and the latter is an undesirable long-term state of affairs, the position can be firmed up by rigging a stern line to hold the boat back against the other two warps. Should she now ride forward, of course she will hang from the stern only and will finish up grinding her aft toerail against the wall, but this situation is neutralised by deploying a bow spring to act as a pair with the stern line. When you are coming alongside, it is important to decide which are the first lines to run ashore. Often, in moderate circumstances of wind and tide, you will opt for bow line and stern line, then rig the springs immediately afterwards. Sometimes, however, you may opt for a pair. If there is a strong stream running along the dock, you will be well advised to choose bow line and stern spring. Get these ashore and secure, then let the boat settle back to them while you rig a stern line, followed, at leisure, by the bow spring. If you are in doubt about how snugly shell lie, motor gently astern against the first pair until the stern line is rigged.
Berthing alongside: Four ropes for four jobs (ends on the dockside. the slack coiled up aboard). Bow line is parallel to stern spring. Stern line is parallel to bow spring. Fenders in place.
Having worked our way through the theoretical functions of warps, lets get back to the order of service for coming alongside: Assess wind and tide conditions on the berth to decide which way to come in. like pile moorings, you will of course choose to arrive uptide or upwind, whichever is the stronger. As you come in, you may want to put your engine astern to drag off the last of your way. If this seems at all likely, bear in mind what your propwalk will do. If it is going to pull your stern into the dock, so much the better. If the contrary will he the case, he ready to check the stern with your warps, and dont use reverse at all if you can avoid it. If there is no tide and not much breeze, you should always choose to put the side to the dock which the boat naturally favours. A right-handed propeller will slide you sweetly into a port-side to berth, for example.
Coming alongside no tide. If you have a choice always dock on the side to which your propeller throws you when going astern. Boat a is fighting the propwalk. Boat b is letting it work for her.
Tell your crew which side to you are coming in, detail off hands for the different jobs, then briefly outline your plan and each persons part in it. Dont make a pedantic meal of this, just tell them whats going on. Prepare your lines in good time, and have your crew standing by in way of the shrouds to step neatly ashore as you bring up alongside. Crew hanging around in the bows with a head-rope in their hands are doomed to disappointment, and you wont be able to see where youre going either. Make sure that you have at least three generously sized fenders rigged around the centre of the boat. If you have a spare, be ready with a roving fender also. As slowly as you can, bring the yacht into the berth. Watch transits on the dock, slip or pontoon to make sure that you are going where you think you are, just as you did when mooring under sail. If there is a strong tide, you may even be able to ferry-glide in sideways under the tightest control imaginable. As the fenders touch the dock, the line handlers should step ashore, walk crisply to the designated cleat or bollard and make fast the ends of their lines. Slack is now taken up on board, and the remaining lines rigged as soon as possible. So long as you stick to one rope for one
job, with no ropes doubled up on cleats aboard or ashore, the business of tying up is simplicity itself. As soon as you err from this principle, chaos or at best, an unseamanlike lash-up is the inevitable result. If you are short-handed, rig a line from amidships as you come in, but have the others ready for action. So long as the line is in approximately the same transverse plane as the centre of lateral resistance, all will be well, unless there is a ripper of a tide. Bring the yacht alongside so that the point of attachment on board (a midships cleat, or perhaps a genoa fairlead block run well forward) is adjacent to a cleat on the dock. Step ashore and make the rope off short. That will hold the boat well enough while you run your four mooring lines out. Once the yacht is properly tied up, the short line can be retrieved. Sometimes you will have to raft up to one or more other vessels. If so, the conventions are clear and universally applied: 1. Ask permission before coming alongside. 2. The most recent arrival supplies the fenders. 3. Tie up to the yacht inside you, then rig shore lines (or pile ropes) to take your own weight without waiting to be asked. Very occasionally, if your boat is small compared with your host, it can make sense to lie to the larger crafts lines, but you must always ask if this will be in order. Not to do so is equivalent in rudeness to helping yourself to a strangers beer without so much as a by your leave.
Springing off. (a) To spring your stern off, motor slowly ahead against a bow spring, using the rudder to deflect the propwash. (b ) To spring your bow off, motor astern against the stern spring. The position of the rudder is irrelevant, but remember that as you motor away you will be pivoting; dont grind your quarter into the dock.
To spring the bow out, motor astern against the stem spring and the bow will waltz round to seaward as if by magic. If this doesnt work. springing the stern out is even more effective. Leave the bow spring on, motor ahead against it, and turn your rudder in towards the wall as though you wanted to steer your bow in. The propeller wash is blown inwards by the rudder. The bow spring levers the stern our as well and, before you know it, you are far enough out to let go and motor astern into open water. Dont forget to use your fenders intelligently while springing off, and always be sure that you can let go the spring line without leaving one of your crew on the pontoon.
Types of rope
Various types of rope are now available, and it is important that the right one is used for a particular job. Polyester is strong, pleasant to handle, long-lived even in sunlight, and enjoys a very low stretch coefficient. In its pre-stretched forms it is often distinguished by a black fleck, or rogues yarn. It is stable enough for sheets and some halyards. Polyester rope is available in either three-strand (traditional) or braided versions. The braided variety is extremely easy on the hands and is generally unwilling to tangle. This makes it ideal for sheets, as well as halyards that are to be led aft. For other uses it may be considered too prone to chafe. Polyester rope can be utilised for anything, but it is somewhat expensive so is often substituted by polypropylene for such items as docklines. Polypropylene is strong, low on stretch, but rough to handle, and degrades seriously in the ultraviolet rays of the sun. For this reason it becomes unreliable after a few years of constant exposure. It is cheap, however, and easy to splice. This makes it excellent for dock-lines, where its low price encourages you to go a few sizes bigger than the minimum. Large ropes are easier to pull and less prone to chafe damage. Polypropylene can be used for running gear in an emergency, but is otherwise not recommended. Nylon is the strongest rope of all, in its three-strand or its plaited versions. Its salient property, other than good chafe resistance, is that it is exceedingly elastic. This feature suits it ideally for anchor work. All anchor rodes or kedge warps should be of nylon. The stretch cushions the pull on the hook and lessens the chances of it being jerked from the bottom by a sudden surge of motion from the boat. More and more hi-tech materials such as kevlar are appearing in yacht cordage. At the time of writing, these super-strong, low-stretch, ultra lightweight ropes are found mainly on racing yachts, where their considerable expense is more readily justified. They dont take kindly to being cleated off, and some suffer easily from abrasion. No doubt after further development they will become standard equipment.
Wire halyards
In spite of the excellent stability of pre-stretched polyester, it is not really rigid enough to set up a Bermudan sail which makes any pretence at performance. A cruiser-racer or fast cruiser will probably be equipped with wire halyards terminating in rope tails for case of handling. Dont be tempted to get rid of them. A rope halyard on a stretch-luff sail usually results in a leading edge like a crinkle-cut potato chip and a yacht that goes to windward like a haystack. Keep a close eye on wire halyards for snags and general signs of weakening.
The clove hitch is extremely quick to tie. Its official use is to attach the bight of a line around another rope or a bar. Unofficially it is convenient for hitching fenders to guard rails and dinghy painters to pushpits on a short-term basis. However, if it is used for this sort of job, it must be backed up by at least one half hitch, otherwise it is capable of working itself loose.
The rolling hitch is the only knot for securing to the bight of another rope, then administering a sideways pull. A typical application would be when you contrive a set of riding turns on your sheet winch with a sail full of wind and the clew out of reach. Rolling hitch a line to the sheet, between the winch and the sail, lead it to a spare winch, then wind on enough tension to give you some slack on the offending sheet, which can then be freed with no trouble at all. The knot can also be used to secure the fall of a tackle around its own parts neat and effective. To tie a rolling hitch, you use the same technique as for a clove hitch, but the first turn is taken twice around instead of once.
A reef knot has only one official job on board, though it is sometimes seconded for making off a lashing. It is used, as its name suggests, for tying in reef points. In order not to jam up it must be symmetrical and, as every Boy Scout can tell you, it is tied in the left over right, right over left manner. If you slip both ends as loops, you have a knot suspiciously like the bow we all tie in our shoes. To undo a reef knot, pull the opposite ends of each side. It will usually capsize for you.
The bowline is the most important knot of all. It supplies a loop which will never slip and never lock up under the most enormous loadings. It is used for numerous jobs, but bending on the jib sheets to the clew ring of the sail is now a universal application. You can use it to tie up your dinghy or to loop a dock-line over a bollard. You can even employ two interlocked to join a couple of ropes together.
How you tie it is up to you. Just remember this. Nelson, John Paul Jones, and every other serious seaman never heard of rabbits and holes. Indeed, the very mention of the furry creature with long ears on board was held to be bad luck. So try to master the quick twist method, the sleight of hand, the smooth, foolproof system that wont let you down when the foredeck is plunging bows under and you are sick and dog-tired. The sheet bend is extremely quick to tie and is a reliable way of joining two ropes, so long as they both remain under steady strain. If they are to be subject to snatching, take the working end round again (twice more if you feel it needs it) and make a double (or treble) sheet bend.
The single sheet bend: useful as a quickie knot. For the double form, take an extra turn of the 3 strand rope around the bight and tuck it under its own standing part.
The round turn and two half hitches is the absolutely sure way or tying up your dinghy, or your mooring rope to a ring in the quay wall. It is also the conventional means of securing fender lanyards to the guard rails. The knot has the advantage that, within reason, it can be let go under load, particularly if you have slipped the hitches into a bow form. Its other great recommendation is that it is the most obvious knot in the world to tie. You can teach it to a 2-year-old as his or her first knot.
These seven knots will see you safely around the seas. There are several more which have genuine applications in todays sailoring world, but if you are entirely familiar with the ones we have discussed, you need never be stuck with a loose end.
A common whipping. Every sailor should be able to execute one of these quickly and without referring to a textbook.
Youll hear people saying that this type of whipping must be done with a palm and needle, and so it must if you are putting one on the end of a braided rope; otherwise, fiddle-de-dee! I have whipped ropes like this for 25 years and they have crossed oceans in such vulnerable sites as under the bowsprit of a schooner where they served to finish off the permanent gaskets. Take it from me, they do not let go, and they are quick and easy to execute. The art of splicing three-strand rope is dying out amongst amateur sailors, more is the pity. The only splice you really need is the eye-splice. The short splice, used for joining two ropes permanently if untidily together, is useful for fixing up chafed-through dock-lines which are otherwise full of life. The eyesplice is not illustrated here because there is more than one correct way to do it, and besides, there are some things you just cant learn from books. I was taught by a shipmate in a pub. The deal was that I bought the beer. It took him three pints to get me squared away. I practised until the landlord called time. We had to carry my tutor back to the ship, but it was cheap at the price. I never forgot how to make that vital first tuck. If you want to learn to splice, find yourself a thirsty sailor, and do the job properly.
Rope handling
Making fast Whatever you are making fast a rope to, in whatever circumstances, you should always ask yourself the same questions: Could conditions conceivably arise in which I will require to ease or release this rope under load? If so, have I made it fast in such a way that this will be readily possible? If not, will I be able to slack up sufficiently by easing the other end? Reading between the lines youll be able to see that a rope should never be made up in such a way that neither end can be eased under control. Now walk round any yacht marina and cast a critical eye on the way the boats are tied up. Theyll get away with their folly in a nice antiseptic marina berth, but if those skippers tie up like that on a tidal wall on a windy day Extrapolating this proposition one notch further, youll see that when you tie up a boat, each rope (bow line, stern spring, etc) must be a separate entity and each must have its own separate point of attachment on board. If you secure one on top of another, sooner or later youll want the bottom one when the top one is loaded up. Similarly, if you use the other end of the bow line for the bow spring, youll end up with a lubbers muddle that would sink a sailors heart. Get it right: One rope, one job, half the work, no problem . Securing to a cleat There are various seamanlike ways of securing to a cleat. The important thing is to ask yourself: Is the way I am doing this absolutely foolproof against jamming or locking up, and will I be able to ease the rope away under control if I want to? Answer yes and you are doing it right. Its important to lead the rope properly in the first instance (see photographs) or you are on a loser. Once the first half turn is on, plenty of figures-of-eight works well, though some folk prefer a full round turn first. Suit yourself, is what I say, so long as it cant lock up and wont work loose.
Making fast to a cleat. Note that this halyard cannot possibly jam and the coil is hung neatly and securely.
When a rope is made up on a cleat, or belayed to a pin, it is the friction of the turns which holds it fast. Theoretically, therefore, there is no need for any sort of back turn or locking hitch to finish the job. This is true in a perfect world. Unfortunately, there are circumstances where a locking hitch is desirable for total security, for example where a cleat is too small to accept the required number of figures-of-eight, or if the rope is so springy and slippery that you cannot trust it to stay put. Sometimes, a locking hitch is useful on a mooring line if you are leaving the boat, but wherever you use one, always be sure that there are sufficient turns underneath it so that it cannot jam up, whatever chance may come along. So long as you obey that rule, what harm can there be in a locking hitch? None, I believe yet die-hards will fix you with their glittering eyes and state that he who uses a back turn is no sailor. He wasnt, in the days of hemp and manila ropes which shrink-wrapped themselves on to a cleat when they were soaked in water. But that was half a century ago. All I ask is that you consider the principles, then think each case out for yourself. Coiling All three strand ropes are right-hand laid. As a result, they coil clockwise. Cable-laid hemp hawsers didnt, but I havent seen one of those on a yacht since 1969, and then it was so old it snapped under the most modest of loads. Try to force a right-handed rope the other way and it will hate it. So will you, especially when it runs off the coil in a series of block-shattering kinks. You shouldnt have it in you to coil against the lay, whether you are tidying up your washing line or coiling a 100 metre kedge warp on the deck. Some braidlines and plaited ropes can be turned either with or against the clock; others still prefer the right-handed coil because they have a laid-up three-strand core. So if you always coil right-handed (or clockwise, or with the northern sun, its the same thing) all will be well. If you want a long rope to run clean for all its length, it isnt always a good idea to rely on a coil. Flaking, or faking, is usually more reliable. Simply lay the rope down in a suitable fashion, passing it through your hands the whole way, so that when it is called to run, not a single centimetre of it will the under the centimetre that precedes it. There are prescribed patterns for flaking ropes out, but any pattern, even disorder, will do, so long as the principle above is adhered to.
Tying up
Which knot? Most of the time it is obvious which knot should be used in a particular case; sometimes there is a choice; occasionally, it genuinely doesnt matter which one you select. As always, the answer is to take a moment to think through what you expect of the knot, and what could go wrong. A typical example is how to tie the yacht up to a ring. Do you use a round turn and two half hitches, or is a bowline preferred? The first question is: Will I have to let the rope off from the dock under load? And the reply should be: Not necessarily, because the other end of the line will be made fast to a cleat aboard, and I can always ease that away. This leaves the use of the bowline open. If, for some reason, you may not be able to ease the line from the deck, a bowline should never be used. The main advantage which may be won by employing a bowline is that you can make the loop as long as you like. Sometimes, when tying up to the ring on a pile, for example, it is handy to be able to untie the rope without actually getting close to the ring because it may be submerged at High Water. If you do use a bowline for any mooring purpose, however, always lay a round turn on the ring before making the knot. This will treble the bearing surface and eliminate any tendency to chafe. On the question of chafe, you should always be aware that a single line led through a ring and back on itself such as you might use when picking up a mooring is extremely vulnerable in this respect. Lying to such an arrangement is fine for a short stop in calm weather. Overnight, leave the doubled line on for convenience, but secure with a heavier rope attached by a round turn and two half hitches, or a round turn and a bowline. If things look really grim on an exposed mooring buoy, you can always go for the final solution and shackle on your anchor cable. Itll be noisy for the denizens of the focsle, but youre the skipper so youll have shrewdly selected the quarter berth for your own watch below.
Coming alongside
The chances are that your crew will be less experienced than you. Watching someone who doesnt really know what to do step ashore with a dock-line is rarely edifying. Its up to you to tell the hands what is required. Here is a rule-of-thumb method for a fully crewed boat. It covers most regular situations: State which side to, and rig fenders. (Dont put them over until youre nearly there, though. Nothing looks more sloppy.) Prepare all four dock-lines. Have two ready for instant action. Lead the lines out correctly (through pulpit/pushpit etc), decide how much youll need ashore, then allow half as much again for contingencies. Coil this up in hand, ready to take on to the dock. Then make the bight fast aboard, on the cleat designated for the lines just in case it is necessary to take a turn ashore in order to stop the boat. As the boat comes alongside, the two lines are carried ashore and the ends made fast on the dock. The slack is pulled in and made fast aboard. Unless you specifically tell them to do so, the crew should not snub any lines. The helmsman is in complete charge at all times. As soon as possible, send out the remaining two lines. Note that the ends of all four lines are made off ashore; and all slack rope is on board the yacht. This discourages thieving. It also looks tidy, and passers-by who have come to admire your vessel wont trip and fall into the harbour. If you are short-handed, you wont be able to achieve this ideal state of affairs. Then you must step ashore with the two lines, take up the slack on the dock and make the bight fast there and then. Once youve got the other lines on, you can tidy up so that everything is left in the approved manner. The same rules apply if you are alongside another yacht. Always make your ends fast on her. Her skipper doesnt want a great heap of your old rope dumped in his cockpit and dont ask her crew to pull in your boat. Why should they? If you were coming alongside the harbour wall, youd have to manage alone. To throw the other owners wife a bunch of tanglies and ask her to heave away is to add insult to injury. If it were me, Id make the end off, chuck the rest into the sea with a friendly All fast, and let them get on with it, assuming theyd rigged their fenders adequately, that is. Stopping the vessel Sometimes, you need to stop the boat with a rope: Always lead the rope from abaft your pivot point, otherwise your stern will swing out as your way comes off. Make fast the bight on board, and step ashore with a reasonable supply of line as the boat goes by. Snatch a turn around a strong cleat and let the line surge around it, applying steadily more pull as the boat slows down. You can stop quite a heavy vessel in a few metres like this, but if you attempt to stop her dead, something will break. The potential energy of 7 tons proceeding at 3 knots is phenomenal. Dissipated over a short distance it is readily controlled by a competent infant, but if you snub the line off short, the energy available would comfortably lift an automobile. It will lift your cleats as well, if the rope doesnt snap first.
Towing
Ideally, you should attach a tow rope to the towing vessel in the vicinity of her pivot point. Only in this way can full manoeuvrability be retained. If you are supplying the tow with your yacht, this is probably going to be impossible, because of your back-stays and the general lack of strong points in the desired area. Towing is therefore best done from the stern, but it must be from the centre. You are usually left with no choice but to rig a strop between the quarter cleats or fairleads and attach the tow-line to the bight of this, normally with a bowline. If the sea is rough, you may find your cleats taking severe punishment. If so, take lines from them to the primary winches and grind them forward against the pull. That will firm them up enough to cope with most circumstances. Suspending a weight from the bight of the tow-line may help take out some of the snatch. When you, yourself, are under tow, you should arrange to lead the line over the bows, but watch out for chafe. Youll certainly have to rig some sort of chafing gear. A long plastic pipe is best, but on an extended tow this may disintegrate. If the chips are really down and you are running out of gear, you may have to sacrifice your plumbing system. Toilet piping is the best chafing gear yet devised by man. Second-hand it leaves something to be desired socially, but by this time such fine considerations will have been left behind. If you are being towed by a powerful vessel, your cleats or foredeck samson posts will soon be under the severest strain. Just as when you are towing, they should be winched up tight; indeed, anything you can do to spread the load round the ship will be desirable. If you have a keel-stepped mast, you can put your tow-line round that. Dont try this in a seaway, though; if your spar is stepped on deck, or you may join the ranks of those who aggravated their misfortune with a rapid dismasting. Make fast the tow-line (yours, for preference, or you may come in for a more serious salvage claim), and settle down to steer the boat straight at the stern of the towing craft. If your vessel is small enough, keep any movable weight (like your crew) as far aft as possible, and maintain communication even if its only visual with the towed vessel at all times. Towing in harbour is best done with both craft alongside one another, tied together with good spring lines. Steering may not be ideal, but at least the tug can stop without receiving the tow in his cockpit. If you are involved in a rescue operation, try to agree a fee beforehand, if payment seems appropriate. Failure to do so could involve you or your insurers in some very heavy expense.
8. Anchoring
The onset of large-scale marina development has led to a decline in anchoring as an everyday occurrence. Serious cruising yachts still do it regularly, but a growing number of marina-hoppers from the Western worlds great yachting centres anchor hardly at all. This is an unmitigated blessing because it keeps the wilder harbours, rivers and roadsteads clear of gleaming fleets. During our time ocean cruising, my wife and I spent literally hundreds of nights and days lying to various types of ground tackle in different boats. I can count on one hand the occasions on which we dragged, and they were all predictable. The right tackle well deployed is always a better bet than a mooring of unknown quality. Anchors do not work by virtue of their weight alone. They sink their teeth into the seabed, and wont let go until you are ready to wrest them clear. Their mass is built up largely to assist them in doing this. All anchors dig in by being pulled along the bottom in as horizontal a direction as can conveniently be achieved. Heaving the hook over the bow and tying off the rode when the ironmongery hits the ground serves no purpose at all. The minimum effective length of chain cable for all practical anchoring is three times the depth of the water. This is known as a 3:1 scope; ideally it should be increased to at least 5:1 if you are anchoring on a nylon warp. If circumstances allow it, longer scopes are a first-class insurance against dragging. A big anchor well dug in on a 10:1 scope of chain is virtually unshiftable, especially if you weight the cable, but more of that later.
Classical anchoring
Holding ground
An anchor is only as good as the substrate you are asking it to take hold of. Firm sand promises a fair grip and offers the advantage of clean ground tackle when you come to weigh. Dont expect the world from soft sand, and dont attempt to anchor on rock unless your life depends upon it and no other option is available. Your hook either wont hold at all or, if you are lucky (or perhaps unlucky, depending upon your circumstances), it will become irreversibly jammed in a crevice. There it will stay, and you will stay with it if you are using chain cable. If a rode is allowed to touch a rock, or a coral bottom particularly, it will chafe through in short order and youll be on your way. Mud and clay, or clay and sand, are the best holding grounds of all. I once sat out a very serious blow at the end of a long scope of chain with my CQR (see below) working its way steadily deeper and deeper into blue clay. It worked so well that when we wanted to leave, nothing we could do would pluck the hook out. The diver subsequently hired assured me that he had to dig to find it! Always beware of foul ground. It is sometimes given a mention on the chart, but often you must use your common sense. Any ancient harbour, or areas in the vicinity of long-term boatyards, should not be used for anchoring. The bottom will be cluttered up with all sorts of rubbish, including redundant mooring cables. If you must anchor there, always use a tripping line (see below).
Types of anchor
The CQR or plough There seems little doubt that since its first appearance aboard seaplanes before World War II, the plough has been as good a burying anchor as any available. Its holding power per unit weight is hard to equal and it is easy to stow. In its genuine CQR form (try running the letters together; they stand for secure) it is superbly forged, richly galvanised and will give a lifetime of trouble-free service as a best bower. It isnt as good as a fisherman anchor in kelp, but otherwise, in my experience, it is unbeatable. The Bruce anchor This fine piece of hardware was developed for oil platforms. It holds as well as a CQR when things are going its way, and it is said to work well on short scopes. It is, however, a brute to store except in a permanent bow roller arrangement. You may feel that this is unsatisfactory for a number of reasons, including the stowage of a considerable weight exactly where no sane person would want it, but many reasonable folk find the compromise is worth it. At least you dont have to totter around the foredeck carrying 20 kg of muddy old iron every time you get under way. The Danforth anchor This exhibits the obvious property of stowing flat. It also holds well in sand of indifferent quality. For these reasons it is a useful extra anchor to keep aboard. Some people favour it as a kedge. The fisherman anchor The fisherman anchor is much maligned, yet much misunderstood. So long as it is well designed, this traditional anchor form is still one of the finest anchors available for larger craft of the heavy displacement persuasion. It doesnt work very well at much less than 25 kg weight, and it needs to be used with chain, but given these parameters, it can hold amazingly well in normal holding grounds, as well as having the edge over all other forms in weedy, kelpy bottoms. When unstocked, it takes up an unexpectedly small amount of space. I know of one 30 tonne vessel that uses a 50 kg fisherman and 10 mm chain. Given scope enough, the arrangement has never been known to let her down. There are all sorts of other anchor types available, and these require individual assessment. Generally speaking, however, the combination of a 15 kg CQR and plenty of 10 mm chain is ideal for a cruising yacht of up to 10 metres (35 feet). Bigger anchors work better than smaller ones of a given type, because their weight helps them to dig in, and all cruising vessels should carry at least two. Speak to the anchor manufacturer rather than the boat builder to determine the correct size for your requirements. Many of todays production craft are delivered with ground tackle which couldnt be expected to hold a sailboard, let alone 5 tonnes of yacht.
Types of cable
Chain The great advantage of chain over nylon rope is its weight. When a boat is riding to a chain, the cable sags into a curve called a catenary. As a result, the pull delivered to the hook is more horizontal. A spin-off from this is that you can lie to the shortest possible scope. The weight of the chain also produces a damping effect on the boats tendency to surge around. This not only keeps her quiet, it also reduces her capacity for plucking the anchor out of the bottom. Chain cable is, of course, totally chafe-resistant, both at the seabed and at the bow fairlead. It also self-stows if the locker is deep enough, and is comparatively easy to scrub clean. To set against all these plus factors, chain is heavy to carry on board and expensive. It also requires regalvanising every ten years or so. While its strength is normally above suspicion, it can allow snubbing to occur in extreme conditions. This will be considered under Storm anchoring (see below). The final drawback of chain is that it is noisy at the stemhead. Long-term cruisers often solve this problem by rigging a short, nylon rope snubber hooked into the bight of the cable between wind and water. This is made fast on deck so as to take the strain. The cable above the hook is allowed to droop in a short bight, while it is left made fast on deck so that in the event of the strop chafing through, nothing is lost but a short piece of rope. Nylon rope The strength of nylon rope, together with its remarkable elastic properties, makes it ideal for anchor rode. The tendency it has to chafe, as noted above, must be kept constantly in mind. At deck level a dedicated length of plastic hose, cut to allow it to slip on to the bight, often does the trick. At the business end, a minimum of 5 metres of chain should be rigged between the rode and the anchor the more chain the better. The weight of the chain will improve the angle of pull, and chafe at the seabed will be neutralised. Scopes of rode should be as long as convenient at all times, and the light weight of the material increases your incentive to do the right thing. Unless you have a good windlass, the opposite is true with chain, where the far-sighted mariner often ends up compromising what he knows should be laid on account of the joys in store when the time comes to lug it all back in again. The loss of the damping effect of chain is to some extent compensated by the extreme spring of the nylon, which keeps snatching loads on the anchor to a minimum.
Weighting the cable. The weight holds dawn the catenary at the cable, giving the anchor a better angle at which to take hold.
In such cases it is well worth weighting down the bight of your cable, be it warp or chain. Proprietary chunks of custom-made gear used to be available under such imaginative brand names as chum or angel. If you cant lay your hands on one, rig a 25 kg scale weight to a big shackle and lower that down the cable until it is about halfway to the seabed. Beware of chafe if the cable is nylon. In the absence of any prepared heavy item, you can always press that broken-down outboard engine into service, or lash together half a dozen housebricks.
Selecting an anchorage
Shelter is the prime consideration when selecting an anchorage, closely followed by good holding ground. Since the right tackle will hold the boat in any wind within reason, it is the sea from which you require protection. I have lain in comfort with a whole ocean blowing two and a half thousand miles of tradewind sea my way, with no more protection than a coral reef, just awash, a hundred metres to windward. Apart from the thrumming of the breeze, it was so calm you could have been on the Thames. A bay with a couple of good headlands provides fine shelter in an offshore breeze, but always be sure that what begins as offshore is going to stay that way. The last thing you want is to find your idyll turned into a breaking lee shore at two in the morning. The ideal depth for anchoring would be sufficient to float you with at least half your draught for a safety margin all round.
A safe anchorage perfect shelter in winds from NNW to SSW; safe from N to S through West. (Note the useful transit to check the anchor is holding.)
This is often not practicable. Nevertheless, you should avoid anchoring in deeper water than is absolutely necessary because your scope options will be less if you do. Besides, it will mean more gear to lift when the time comes. Considerations of tidal rise will often come into this decision, but those are dealt with in Chapter 14. When picking your spot to let go, bear in mind your probable swinging circle. This is more important with regard to shoals than it is to other boats. Unless they are of a radically different form from your own, you should swing in some sort of unison. Dont take chances, even so, particularly in tidal rivers. With the wind against the tide, anything can happen, and it often does.
Laying an anchor
The success of anchoring rests in the way the cable is laid, the manoeuvring of the boat and the relationship between the two. The crucial thing to remember about setting an anchor is that it doesnt do the job by itself. Its shape has been developed so that when pulled along the seabed it will roll over and do the business, but if no one gives it a tug it can only lie there until a real strain is exerted. Then it may dig in, or it may not, depending upon the sort of pull the boat delivers, and by that time you are probably tucked up in your bunk, hoping for the best. Under power Nowadays most people anchor under power. First, the boat is headed up to the wind, the tide, or to seaward if she finds herself in an open roadstead where an onshore breeze may become a contingency. As soon as she has lost way over the ground, the anchor is dropped, or lowered if it is light enough. When it is on the bottom, the run of the cable is checked and the boat is steered away astern, laying cable in a straight line as she goes. Because it is difficult for an anchor to dig in at high speeds, the engine is put out of gear when the chosen scope has nearly all run over the roller. The boat now carries her way astern. As the cable is snubbed, the yachts weight will pull out any bights that may have been laid on the seabed. Once the cable has been straightened, the foredeck crew will see it rising from the water. This demonstrates that the anchor is taking a nibble at the substratum. Now comes the magic. Rather than allowing the yacht to ride forward under the effect of the weight of cable, you should put her engine half astern as the last of her way comes off. After a few seconds she will begin to move slowly astern again as the hook works into the bottom. If she continues to move for any distance, the anchor is skating over the ground, and the yacht must be slowed down to give it a chance. In all probability, however, it will take; if it doesnt, you must heave it up and try again. The yacht now comes to rest with the propeller still turning in astern and the cable stretching out ahead at a shallow angle. At this point you should take a critical took around you to see if you are dragging the pick through the clay. The best method of being sure is to use beam transits. Any two items will do. A tree and a courting couple will serve beautifully, so long as the human element isnt moving around too much. At night, a star can profitably be lined up with an illuminated public convenience or anything else nearer to you than the star itself. If your transits are stationary, put on a few more revolutions to make sure. The couple will slide away from the tree slightly as the boat leans harder on her cable, then they may well creep back into the shade as the yacht springs back a metre or two under the weight of the catenary. As soon as you are convinced, you can throttle down the engine and hoist the anchor ball. Youll sleep soundly now, because if the anchor can stand the pull of your engine, it can certainly cope with most of what the weather can throw at you. Under sail Sailing the anchor in at the end of a passage is particularly satisfying, especially if the whole trip has been made without groping for the diesel. However, if you are at all tight for space, youll have to sum up your options carefully, because unlike the mariner anchoring under power, the sailor may only have a single chance. The shrewd operator will already be aware that tidal stream often poses the question, Will the mainsail fill or spill when I am lying to my anchor? Just as in a mooring situation, the answer dictates whether or not the main can be carried through the manoeuvre. However, when the current does not command your actions, the most positive method is to approach downwind under headsail only, with the main stowed. This method is more hairy than some sailors have stomach for. I can understand this, but if you want to be sure, and youve space enough to do it, why not give it a go? Approach from upwind, let go the anchor where you want it to lie, then sail on, spilling wind from the jib to keep your speed within sensible bounds. After the cable has been snubbed off youll be in no doubt that the hook is holding because the yacht will suddenly swing round and lie head up to the breeze with the jib flogging. If you cant cope with the sudden-death qualities of this method, the truly civilised technique for digging in the hook, if conditions allow, is this: lower your headsail early, luff exactly head-to-wind, drop anchor as the boat loses the last of her way, then physically push out the main boom on a slack sheet and sternboard dead downwind until you have laid out your desired scope of cable. The yachts bows will dip as this is snubbed off and the anchor takes hold, leaving you in no doubt as to the success of the job. Its elegant, it needs skill and practice, but as with Alices Thanksgiving Dinner, It cant be beat. Should neither of these methods prove practicable, you will need to rely upon the inertia of the boat alone to dig in the anchor. If this is going to be the way of things, youll manage better if you drop all sails as the anchor is let go. This is because your bow could well fall far enough off the wind to fill the main before the hook has dug in, resulting in an embarrassing cruise round the anchorage with 40 metres of chain hanging over the bow. In circumstances where you cant risk lowering all your canvas, bear in mind that the windage of a flogging headsail will aggravate any tendency to blow off. So even if it seems more prudent to leave the main up, you are still better off dropping the jib. The folks assembled on the foredeck to handle the ground tackle will love you for your care and consideration, and if things do go wrong, rehoisting it in a hurry is easy. Again, a certain amount of space is required. Some boats will keep their heads up backing off from an anchor if you sheet the main hard in. The foredeck crew can help hold her head-to-wind by carefully checking the cable as it runs out. This works well under mizzen alone, in a ketch or a yawl. Its a treat in a schooner under mainsail. Dont forget that as soon as the boat begins to sternboard, she is steering astern as surely as if she were under power, so her rudder operates in reverse. Anchoring under sail in the brave new world of the reliable auxiliary has one significant difference from laying a hook with no certainty of available power. If your engine doesnt work, or you are a real sailor who doesnt have one at all, ignore the following advice. For the rest of us, there will always be occasions when light airs have made it impossible to sail in the hook to our satisfaction. If serious wind is expected in the near future, it is worth swallowing your pride and digging the beast in under power just before bedtime. Otherwise youll wake at 0400 to the first flurry of rain and lie there wondering whether or not you should go on deck, just to make sure.
Weighing anchor
Under power When there is no wind or tide to speak of, you can pull most yachts up to their anchor either by using the windlass or by manual heave-ho. If you opt for armstrongs patent, take the strain steadily to get the boat moving. Once her inertia is overcome, the cable will rattle in merrily enough. On occasions when you have wind, tide or sea to contend with, motoring carefully towards the hook will ease life remarkably for the foredeck gang. A windlass can also benefit from some gentle assistance from the propeller. When the cable is up and down, the vertical pull will normally lift the anchor clear of its hold. If it doesnt, and neither you nor your windlass can heave it clear, try motoring half astern. This does the trick on most occasions. Sometimes, however, the pick is so firmly in that you must use the whole boat to break it out. Ease away enough cable to enable you to take a run at the hook, then go full ahead, gathering slack as you approach the anchor. When the cable is nearly up and down, snub it off, either with the windlass or around a cleat or post. The inertia of the whole boat plus her engine power is now brought to bear on the anchor, which will come clear unless it is fouled. Sailing out your anchor The usual criteria of wind and tide apply. If you are lying to the tide, with the wind abaft the beam, the job is easy. Pull up a headsail, sheet in, then sail up to and over the anchor, gathering slack as though you were breaking it out under power. As you sail over it, snub the chain and let the boat do the work. When there is no tide, or the tide is with the breeze, youll have to hoist the main, letting it spill wind until youve hauled the boat up to the hook and broken it out by main force. If youve no windlass and the pick wont budge, hitch a spare halyard on to the bight of the cable (rolling hitch) and lead it to a winch. If your cable is of rope, lead it to your biggest sheet winch. When the anchor breaks out, run up a headsail and off you go. There is nothing to stop you having a jib hoisted as you weigh anchor, except the fact that it gets in the way. If instant control is critical, youll just have to put up with this. Finally, where you have searoom in abundance, there is no reason not to heave the anchor up with all your sails stowed. Its neat, and it totally defuses the traumas associated with flogging sails. After the hook is aboard and you have washed down, set a genoa, bring the boat up on to a close-reach, hoist the main and away you go.
Fouled anchors
So long as it stays shackled to its cable, which it will if you have wired the shackle properly, there are only two things that can go wrong with an anchor on the seabed. It can become fouled, either by its own cable around a spare fluke (as can happen with a fisherman) or by some foreign body neutralising its effectiveness (such as a large baked bean can impaled on the fluke of a CQR). These difficulties, together with excess of seaweed, will cause the anchor to fail in its duties. The only cure is to heave it up, clear it, and try again. The other type of fouling has the opposite effect. An anchor is designed to grab the ooze, but given half a chance it will grab an undersea cable even more efficiently. Anchors are also prone to embracing wrecks, bedsteads, drowned motor cars and anything else they can lay their flukes on. These problems are best avoided by not anchoring in foul ground, but should you be caught out, or just plain unlucky, your actions are as follows: Heave up using any available power to try and bring the anchor, plus its obstruction, within reach from deck or dinghy. When you can reach the ground-chain, pass a rope around it and make both ends fast on board. Lower away the anchor until the weight of the ground-chain comes on to your rope and the hook falls clear. You are now moored to the ground-chain by a doubled-back rope. Let go one end of your rope, pull it aboard from the other, and you are on your way. This method is especially useful when you foul someone elses anchor in a crowded harbour. If the above doesnt work, your last hope short of a swim is to use the dinghy to lower a bight of chain down your anchor cable with both ends aboard. When the chain reaches the anchor it will sometimes slide down the shank until it reaches the crown. If it is then pulled vertically upwards it will, in ideal circumstances, capsize the anchor, lifting it clear of the obstruction. Dont expect the world from this, but its worth a try before you call in the diver. If the water is reasonably warm and less than about 6 metres deep, a fit person equipped with mask, snorkel and flippers has an excellent chance of clearing his own anchor. Every yacht should carry this equipment. If you dont have it, or you cant swim well enough, youll have to pay for the professionals. Trip lines When in doubt, rig a trip line. This is a line rigged from the crown of your anchor to a small buoy, or brought back on board. Rig it before you anchor, then if your pick fouls you can pull it clean by capsizing it with the tripping line. Be careful about the length of the line. Dont wrap it around your propeller shaft, and if you decide to bring it back to the stem to avoid the messiness of an anchor buoy, watch out for it winding itself round the anchor chain as you swing. If it does this too many times, it wont work when you want it, Ive even known it to be shortened so much by this effect that it has self-tripped. Tripping lines are a thorough-going nuisance, but occasionally it is sensible to rig one, despite the trouble they can bring.
Kedging off
When youve run aground and you cant get off any other way, lay out the heaviest anchor you can handle, as far to seaward as you can manage to propel the dinghy. Lead the warp to your most powerful winch from either bow or stern, depending upon which way you think youre most likely to come off, and haul her back into deep water. In extreme cases, you may need to reduce draught by lightening the boat (carrying stores ashore, emptying water tanks, etc) or by inducing a heel. The most dramatic way of reducing draught is to send a snatch block aloft on a halyard (the spinnaker halyard for preference, because of its universal swivel), with the bight of the kedge warp through it. The warp is then led through turning blocks to the winch (the genoa fairlead block is often ideal). When you start winding, the boat will be laid over as well as hauled away. It often works and the drama is tremendous value for any onlookers.
Storm anchoring
When you fear your best bower and your maximum scope arent going to be enough, youll have to lay out your number two anchor on the end of your kedge warp. Lay it from the dinghy, or use the yacht if time and circumstances permit. Take it as far out as you can, so that the yacht is at the apex of a V formed by the two anchor cables. Once the blow is really happening, even up the strain on the two hooks. If the wind is expected to shift significantly, buoying the anchors is a useful sophistication because then you can see where they are. This helps you to think creatively about how best to use them from the other end of the warp and the cable. Alternatively, you can rig two anchors in tandem by attaching an extra one to the bower on the end of a short length of chain. I have no personal experience of this method, but sound commentators have been recommending it for many years. Chain and rope combinations In really extreme circumstances, I have known yachts snub at chain cable even on a 10:1 scope. Snubbing is unacceptable. The answer, if this rarest of situations looks like developing, is to rig a longish length of nylon warp into the bight of the final 15 metres or so of chain. The slack is taken up on the warp and the chain eased out into a bight. The stretch of the nylon now acts as a spring to which the boat lies comparatively quietly. She also benefits from the ultimate security of the chain, which is still there, and the warp is assisted in its job by the weight of the bight, which it must straighten out before its elastic limit is reached. A suitable length of warp ready-equipped with a chain hook should be carried for this. It can also double as the fair-weather snubber mentioned earlier.
9. Yacht Engines
The most dramatic of the remarkable revolutions in yachting brought about by the great technological advances of the second half of the twentieth century is the establishment of the light, totally reliable diesel auxiliary. Gone are the days when we pressed the starter button, hand in mouth, more in hope than in expectation. The petrol marine engine with its vulnerable electrics and lethal fuel is in full retreat. It may be cheap, and it does weigh next to nothing, but its vices are no longer considered acceptable by the majority, at any price. Todays marine diesels and automotive conversions are the wonder of the age, and nobody should take them for granted. They are the biggest single safety feature on the boat. They will drive us to windward, helped by a deep-reefed mainsail, in the most difficult weather. They will drag our boats off a weather berth which would otherwise smash them to matchwood. They allow us access to marinas and quays where to sail in would be inconvenient in the extreme. They propel us at a useful speed through calms. They lighten our darkness with their associated electrical systems, and they power the electronics which, lamentably, are becoming necessities of life for some sailors. They can even heat the washing-up water. And all they ask is the minimum of tender, loving care.
Basic maintenance
A diesel engine will give year after year of trouble-free running so long as it is regularly supplied with clean fuel, lubricated with clean oil, and cooled by clean water. It will start every time if there are enough amps in the battery to turn it at the required speed and the starter motor and battery have bright, dry terminals. Routine maintenance as recommended by the manufacturer should therefore be attended to in an attitude of religious dedication. All these tasks will be of a minor nature and are easy for a non-technical person to perform assuming the boat-builders have used their brains with regard to the engine installation. Battery acid levels shouldnt require much attention, but a regular check will reassure you that all is well. When your accumulators start needing regular top-ups, it is often a sign that the end of their life is near; engine and gearbox oil levels are simplicity itself to monitor, but bear in mind that some units give a higher reading when the oil is hot than when it is cold. The engine oil must be changed at the designated intervals. An extra change is recommended immediately before winter if the boat will not be used much, so that the engine rests with clean oil inside. Most yards make life even easier by supplying a dumping point for used oil. The oil filter should be renewed at each oil change and this, too, ought to be a five-minute job. Be ready for oil spills, though. Every two or three years the starter can be removed, checked over, and serviced if required. That should be all it needs. Keep your stern-tube grease supply well topped up, and give the greaser a turn every couple of hours when the engine is running. Turn it down until you feel resistance when the engine is stopped and youll be surprised how rarely you need to tighten your stern gland. Watch your alternator drive-belt tension and keep all your electrical connections clean and dry, particularly the heavy ones to the starter motor. Its a good idea to remove all these once a year, brighten them up if necessary, then remake them. If there have been any signs of corrosion, a smear of Vaseline after the terminal is tightened up will help. Earth connectors are especially important in this respect. A bad earth can cause no end of intermittent problems, including a starter motor that clicks impotently when all the indications are that it should be turning the engine over. Whether your engine is cooled by raw seawater or a heat exchanger with a fresh water/antifreeze mixture maintained at the right temperature, keep an eye on the seawater intake filter. If the engine ever stops ejecting cooling water through its exhaust pipe, or whatever other arrangement it uses, the first place to look for a fault is here. Clean fuel is a vital element in a reliable diesel engine. Make sure that what goes into the tank is pure, with no water content. If in doubt, filter the fuel using a good-quality funnel with a water-stopping gauze trap. Clean out your tanks every so often, and maintain at least two filter units between the tank and the injector pump. These filters should be spruced up regularly, at least a minimum of once a season, and one of them should have a glass bowl to facilitate an instant visual check on the state of affairs. Dirty fuel over a period of time will stop an engine as surely as running the tank dry.
Trouble shooting
Flat batteries Any properly organised cruising yacht carries a dedicated engine-starting battery, isolated from all the prodigal extravagances of the domestic supply. In theory it should be impossible for this battery to be flattened, since it will use little of its potential capacity starting a healthy engine, and it is always rapidly topped up to full charge. Any decent battery of suitable size will have more than enough starts in it for all normal and most abnormal circumstances. If the engine wont go after cranking it for ten seconds, then something is wrong and should be investigated. Dont flatten your battery to no purpose. If the engine is believed to be OK, but your battery has given up the ghost for some reason, you must hand-start the engine if you have no other source of electricity. Hand-starting Theoretically, any engine up to 30 or so horsepower can be hand-started by a healthy adult who means business. Some engines seem to be designed to make this difficult, while certain notable yacht manufacturers install the hardware so that the handle either cannot be inserted, or cannot move through a full circle. The compression of a diesel motor is so great that it cannot normally be turned by hand, much less started, unless the exhaust valves are lifted. Therefore most small engines have decompressors, or valve lifters, fitted to their cylinder heads. Ideally, an engine is arranged so that its decompressors can be addressed individually, but by no means all manufacturers see the wisdom of this. If all the cylinders of a multi-pot unit have to be brought into compression at the same time by throwing a single lever, even a powerful athlete may find starting the engine from stone-cold something of a struggle. However, in an ideal world, this is not the case, and the sequence of events goes like this: All the cylinders are decompressed. Half throttle, or more as recommended, is selected, and any cold-start mechanisms are activated. Start winding the handle. If there are two of you, the stronger should wind with both hands, giving it all hes got (like handling the anchor, this is not a job for sexual equality); the other stands by the decompressors. When the engine is spinning as fast as you are going to make it, one cylinder is compressed, while you keep winding at full tilt. Any cylinder will do, and it should fire up, though it may not generate enough oomph to turn the engine alone. Keep winding, and throw the second decompressor. A three-cylinder engine will almost certainly run by now. The third cylinder (and the fourth if there is one) can be activated at leisure, while the ships strong-man is being resuscitated beside the drinks locker. Fortunately, such a monumental effort is not always required. It is only rarely that the starter battery is absolutely flat. As soon as the engine makes clear its unwillingness to start, you must stop trying with the starter motor and conserve those residual volts. They are going to save you considerable exertion. Lets suppose there is no human powerhouse available, or that the engine is a registered recalcitrant. Muscle-power alone wont be enough, but the battery may still be delivering the best part of 12 volts; its just that it doesnt have that extra kick to cause the diesel vapour to explode in the cylinder. Try this: When the decompressed engine is turning as fast as you can make it by hand, activate the starter motor. Immediately, throw the decompressors over, while you continue to give both methods of turning the engine all youve got. Youll achieve a result nearly every time. If your engine cannot be hand-started by you, or anyone else in the probable vicinity, you should always carry a can of ether spray of the type known imaginatively as Easistart. As soon as it becomes clear that the engine is unwilling, desist from wearing out the starter and deploy the chemical weapons. Squirt the stuff into the air intake, preferably while the motor is turning. The combustion chambers will receive such a dangerously explosive mixture that the pistons are belted back down the bores with shocking force. If you dont blow off the cylinder head, the engine will have an excellent chance of doing the honest thing for you. If you can decompress it to help it build up revolutions before going for broke, so much the better. Overheating This stops an engine with horrible efficiency. What is worse, it can stop it on an unpleasantly permanent basis given the full opportunity. An overheated engine may seize, or run a bearing, resulting in serious and expensive disintegration. The usual reason for overheating is a failure of seawater circulation, nearly always caused initially by a blockage at the supply end. If your exhaust is water-cooled, youll know the water supply has failed by the change of tune. Even so, you should always check visually after starting the engine. The most common blockage source is a seacock left off. If the water stops circulating, halt the engine as soon as you can. Most engines will allow you a life-saving few minutes before damage ensues. Close the seacock and inspect the filter. If it is blocked, clear it and reassemble. If it seems clear, leave it open or remove the pipe from the seacock, then carefully open the cock a millimetre or two. Does water enter? Yes? OK, theres no blockage down there. No? Then open the cock fully and poke something down to clear away the plastic bag youve probably drawn in. Once the water gushes in, close the cock, reassemble the system and off you go. When the water is passing as far as the pump, but not circulating, you probably have a damaged pump impeller. This usually occurs either as a result of overheating following failure to turn on the cock, or a blocked filter. Never go to sea without a spare. They are easy to change, but you may need a pump gasket as well. If you havent one, dont despair, cut one out from a piece of paper. If water still doesnt circulate, you have a more serious problem. Call in the yard, or buy a book on engine repairs.
Fuel problems
Bleeding the engine If a diesel engine pegs out under load and it hasnt overheated there is probably air in the fuel system. The only other likely explanation is that it has suffered some major mechanical failure. Therell be no doubt if that is the cause, because there will be dramatic manifestations in the form of noises, fumes and smells. Fortunately, air in the fuel is far more common. It is also readily dealt with. Your fuel system usually becomes air-locked because either you have run out of fuel, or you have clogged-up filters as a result of dirty diesel. Its easy to ascertain whether or not air is your problem. At the end of the fuel chain are the injectors, which are easily recognised. They are on the side of the cylinder head and look something like all-metal spark plugs. Follow the pipes back from them to the fuel injection pump which is generally bolted to the side of the engine. Inspect this and youll find one, or possibly two, bolt heads apparently doing nothing much at all. These are the bleed screws. Ease them off a turn or two. If the system is choked with air, bubbles will froth out. The airlock which they indicate must now be systematically expunged. This is achieved surprisingly easily by following the fuel in its pipe all the way from the tank to the cylinders of the engine.
The first filter is usually positioned between the tank and the body of the engine. This filter does most of the work and is usually the one that is clogged up. Turn off the fuel tap at the bottom of the tank and take the filter apart, cleaning it out and replacing the disposable element if there is one from your well-stocked engineers stores. This wont take you long if the filter is accessible. Have an old towel by you to mop up the excess diesel; as well as a small plastic container to collect the main spillage. If the filter is inaccessible, I suggest that you either move it or buy a new yacht from a more caring manufacturer, because sooner or later youre going to have to do the job when it really matters. The top of the filter will have a bleed screw like the one on the pump. Reassemble the filter, turn on the fuel, then ease this away until bubbles start foaming out. If the tank is lower than the filter, you may have to work the small lever on the side of the fuel lift pump (see above) to induce a flow. When clear diesel runs out, tighten down the screw. The system is now bled this far. If by any chance there is no bleed screw, crack the feed pipe union at the side away from the tank. The fuel pipes next stop is at the lift pump, unless there is more than one pre-filter. The engine usually operates this by mechanical means, but when the main power unit is not functioning, you must turn the engine with the starter motor or by hand (a decompressor helps). If this is unattractive on account of anxiety about your battery or your heart, you can activate it perfectly well with the small lever on one side of it, which enables you to pump fuel manually. There is usually a final filter between the lift pump and the injector pump. This filter is not often dirty if the first one is working well, but if you have any doubts, strip and clean it anyway. Whether or not you do so, you will certainly have to bleed it in the usual way. From here, the fuel pipe runs to the allimportant injector pump. Bleed this as well. Now you are ready to start her up. The injectors will bleed themselves, but it may take some seconds of engine-cranking before they are doing their work successfully. If you are imprudent enough to run out of diesel, you must go through the same process. You may think youll never be so stupid as to let this happen, but sooner or later, everyone is caught out. In my case it resulted from a blocked-up sight gauge. I knew I had enough diesel to get back to my mooring until the engine stopped. I was left drifting around the English Channel in a glassy calm until a passing Frenchman exchanged 20 litres of the finest for a quantity of good English ale. Try to make sure that when your turn comes, bleeding the fuel through after you have filled the tank from your carefully carried emergency cans is mere routine. Dont wait for a moment of life and death to find out whether or not you can do it. Try it first in your berth on a foul day when you dont feel like going for a sail. You only need the simplest tool kit. Ultimately, youll be glad you did, because there are no mechanics offshore waiting for your call. And if the engine ever stops on a dark and stormy night, youll be confident that you know exactly what to do, regardless of what boat you are on.
Sails
Weve already noted in Chapter 3 that as the wind hardens, sails need to be flatter so that they do not overpower the boat. In a really stiff blow this becomes of paramount importance. Halyards on small jibs and deep-reefed mains need to be wound up tight, while outhauls and sheet leads should be set to keep any bag out of the canvas. Attention to sail shape helps to keep the boat on her feet as the waves throw her around, which in turn helps maintain helm balance. With an easy helm she will either go straight or steer through the seas more sensitively, whichever you want, and shell draw far less on the helmsmans reserves as she does so. Only the finest roller reefing genoas are capable of supplying a flat enough sail for upwind work in apparent winds up to gale force, so this is the time to deploy your storm jib on its removable stay. Alternatively, if you have a cutter foretriangle, you can roll the jib away altogether and sail on the hanked staysail which you have thoughtfully provided for tough going. Any proper Bermudan cutter should balance under staysail and deep-reefed main. If your only headsail is a genoa which becomes balloon-shaped when deep-reefed, you may as well roll it up and motor-sail if you have to work to windward. This is a useful option for the average modern cruiser with her big power unit. Keep the reefed main on and steer to maintain it full of wind. Youll point to within 30 or so of the true wind, which should be more than enough for anyone. Should your engine be unreliable and you have a cheap roller genoa, youd be well advised not to go out if there is any chance of a hard breeze developing; or to get rid of it and acquire a set of hanked headsails instead. When the waves are steep, it isnt worth trying to point high to windward. Crack off 5 or 10 and ease the mainsail down to leeward on the traveller. The yacht will heel less, go faster and not be so inclined to be stopped by seas. Trysails Any yacht that wants to be taken seriously must have at least three reefs available in the mainsail. It is philosophical to contemplate the numbers of those which do not. A yacht which is sufficiently canvassed to sail well in 5 knots of breeze will find herself hard pressed in winds approaching gale force, even with a closereefed mainsail. The answer is a trysail, which is a triangular sail set from the mast in place of the mainsail. It is hoisted on the main halyard, tacked down by a strop which allows it to set well above the boom, and sheeted home through quarter-blocks to the secondary cockpit winches. If no winch is available, a tackle will work well. The sail has two sheets like a headsail and is entirely independent of the boom. This last feature is particularly important because, if the boom is damaged on passage, the trysail is always ready to take over. It is cut flat and strong and should be considered as a working sail aboard many all-weather yachts below 10 metres (35 ft) long. Since most mainsails are carried in a groove or track on the aft side of the mast, it is important that the gate which allows the luff or its fittings to enter the groove be sited above the head of the stowed sail. If this is the arrangement, rigging a carefully stowed trysail (still bagged, with just the luff protruding) presents no more difficulty than it need. I wont pretend that doing the job on a freezing dark night in a 6 metre (20 ft) sea is a consummation to be actively sought, but at least the job can be tackled in the reasonable hope of a successful conclusion. If the gate has not been sensibly placed, you are in for a deal of unpleasantness.
Steering in waves
In normal circumstances a yacht should be steered as straight as possible. Any deviation from her course produces extra distance to sail. In waves of significant size and steepness, the situation may change. Going to windward Here, the danger is that the boat will fly off the crest and slam herself to a halt as she crashes into the trough behind it. Flat-floored modern cruisers are particularly prone to this nasty habit, but, by happy coincidence, some of them at least are well equipped to deal with it. If a yacht is quick and light on the helm, she should be pointed up towards the crest of a wave. Then, as the top is reached, the helm is brought smartly up so that she bears away down the back of the heap of water. Performed by a skilled helmsman this technique produces a sort of rhythmic pumping action which will generate worthwhile gains. It is all work, however, and the traditional vessel which carries her momentum straight through the wave crests is easier on her driver. Hell need good oilskins though, because the spray will be flying aft like buckshot. The beam sea In many ways this is the worst condition for all boats. As well see in the Appendix, the beam sea is the thing to be avoided at all costs for many craft in survival conditions. Before such extremes are reached, however, a beam wind is a fair wind and you wont want to waste it. The problem of the beam sea is that the big, steep waves pick up your boat and hurl her down into the trough. This is wet, unpleasant, and can cause structural damage on the lee side of the vessel. Large cabin windows are easily stove in on the lee side, bulwarks can be smashed on traditional craft, and spray dodgers rip away (easily one hopes, lest they carry the stanchions with them). Intelligent helming can mitigate these horrors, in daylight at least. When you see a beast of a sea coming, bear away and put it on the quarter where it can best be dealt with. After it has passed, try to steer a few degrees above your course for as long as its safe, in order to make up what you gave away. Running When you find yourself running in a strengthening wind, it is vital to remain constantly aware of the apparent wind factor. Forty knots of breeze is a modest gale, but a yacht running before it experiences only 33 knots or so across the deck. This is no more than a stiff sailing breeze. If she should now find herself having to turn to windward at 6 knots, the apparent wind speed would rise to something in the order of 45 knots. Because wind force increases as the square of its velocity, the force on the sails from such an airstream is virtually double. Alarming surprises await those who ignore this rule. One feature to be aware of when running downwind in a big sea is the windward roll. As your boat rolls to weather, as roll she will, her natural weather helm changes abruptly to a penchant for lee helm. If you fail to apply the necessary correction promptly, this may result in a gybe-broach. An ordinary broach to windward is bad enough, leaving the boat lying beam-on in the trough, but the dreaded broach to leeward is particularly nasty. Running under headsail only can lessen any broaching tendency by putting the boat into front wheel drive, as it were, though in some craft the loosefooted headsail may not set as stably off the wind as youd like. Sometimes a yacht will surprise you by running as straight as a gun barrel with only a deep-reefed mainsail set. If you are sailing with the wind and seas on the quarter, be ready to run square off on the face of the larger, steeper waves. This will lessen any broaching tendency, so long as you are ready for the roll, and may induce the boat to surf. Surfing lessens the force of the sea still further, as well as being enormously exciting if you are of a sporting turn of mind. It offers you the chance of exhilarating pace in the right direction, but it is emphatically not for the old in spirit. If you get it wrong, the resulting broach is aggravated by centrifugal force generated by the speed of your progress.
Survival tactics
The vital question of navigational strategy in hard conditions near the coast will be discussed in Chapter 27, and all survival options must be considered in the light shed by that chapter. Relating the boat handling possibilities to the strategic situation is part of the overall challenge of bad weather, but before you can don your navigators hat and make a decision about what to do, you need to be aware of the basic survival options open to a sailing cruiser. They are outlined below and, as youll see, none of them answers all possible circumstances in every boat. Heaving to There are two problems attached to heaving to (Chapter 4) as a means of riding out a period of rough weather: there is an upper limit of wind strength for any given boat at which it is no longer realistic, and by no means all boats are suitable for its use. If heaving to is to succeed in this context, a yacht needs a longish keel and a deep forefoot. Many production yachts have neither. As a result, they fall away beam-on to the seas when hove to. Some may even tack themselves, but if your boat has been shown to point well up and remain stable in terms of her angle to the wind, heaving to is a wonderful option. For a start, no one need remain on deck except, of course, for look-out sorties. This increases safety and means that all hands except one can stay in their bunks, proofed against seasickness and conserving their strength. Such a boat should not make more than one knot of leeway. If you think she is doing so, rearrange your sheets so that she is fore-reaching slightly. The motion on a hove-to heavy displacement craft in a gale is more than acceptable. For those of us who generally go to sea in such vessels, it will remain the number one choice. Lying ahull Lying in the trough with no canvas set at all is somewhat discredited by modern research. Nevertheless, for a moderately heavy craft with plenty of forefoot it is probably the next thing for a weak crew to do when the gale becomes such that the craft can no longer carry the canvas required to heave to. The danger, of course, is that she will be knocked down, and that is why an understanding of stability is essential to any skipper who contemplates using this option. In short, light craft should not do it. Ive used it myself with great success, but only in heavy displacement working vessels. I would do it again, but not in a short-keeled, flat-bottomed, beamy production cruiser, where the para anchor is a better solution. The para anchor Historically, yachts and small working craft used to ride out gales with all canvas stowed, lying to a conical canvas-and-wood contraption called a sea anchor. Successes were certainly recorded, but few modern commentators have much to say in favour of the device. Yet todays lighter yachts, which can neither heave to properly nor lie ahull safely, need more than ever before to be able to keep their heads up to the weather. One sound answer is the para anchor, which is a parachute-like drogue deployed from the bow and eased away on long, springy nylon line. The angle at which the boat is lying can be adjusted by a spring line led to the bight of the riding line from the quarter. Numerous reports are filed of the system working well. Chafe is the enemy, and care must be taken to avoid the lines sawing through at fairleads. A para anchor may be very large. It is retrieved by using a trip line. Running off This has the advantage that not only does the boat remain end-on to the waves, the apparent wind force is significantly lessened by her own velocity. The important thing about running is to get your speed right. If it is too slow, your steering will be less effective and you also increase your chances of being pooped; sail too fast, and the danger of broaching becomes acute as the yacht surges away in excess of her hull speed. In most craft, you can tell when youve got it right. Youll settle for something like your best speed close-hauled which, expressed in knots, will be approximately the square root of your waterline length times two. This happens also to be the magic speed above which your fuel economy under power suddenly falls apart. It is the velocity at which your boat makes the best compromise between knots and disturbing the surrounding water. To maintain your speed at the chosen level, keep shortening sail as the wind rises until you are under bare poles. You would be unlucky to suffer conditions in which the average yacht began outpacing herself with no sail set, unless you are off across an ocean. If you do find matters getting out of hand, stream your longest warps in a bight from either quarter. The drag works wonders on boat speed. It also helps you steer by keeping your stern up into the wind. Unlike heaving to and lying ahull, running requires a helmsman, and a good one at that. If your crew is weak, there will be a time limit on what you can expect from this method. It also gobbles up sea room at an alarming rate. Working to windward We have already noted that keeping relatively end-on to the seas is desirable. If you have a sea room problem you wont be able to run. If you cant trust your boat to heave to or lie ahull youll have to try to work her to weather. A powerful performer with a good suit of storm canvas may do this under sail alone; indeed, there is precedent that she can, but an ordinary cruising boat may find herself hard-pressed to succeed, usually through lack of headsail drive. The alternative is therefore to motor-sail with a deep-reefed main or trysail only. If your boat has an exceptionally powerful engine you may find that heaving to under power, or dodging, works for you. Here, you take in all sail, or leave up a close-reefed main or, preferably, a mizzen, and motor slow ahead. Your boat speed should counteract the surface water drift and the tendency of the waves to drive you back, so that you remain more or less stationary over the ground. I know from experience that this works well in a motor fishing vessel of 15 metres (50 ft) or so. I cannot say how it would prove in a yacht, but in extremis, it would be well worth a try if her engine were big enough to overcome the windage of her rig and keep her head up despite her lack of forefoot.
Chart projections
Certain compromises must be made by the cartographer to deal with the inconvenience caused by the world being more or less round, while the chart is necessarily flat. Generally, these arrangements distort the coastline. On world-sized maps, they can give rise to gross misconceptions about the relative size of land masses in different latitudes, but, as we shall see, there are useful trade-offs for these drawbacks. The Mercator projection is the most usual chart form for coastal and offshore work. It is characterised by the meridians of longitude appearing as parallel equidistant lines, while the parallels of latitude are drawn further apart towards the Poles. The over-riding advantage of the Mercator projection for the navigator is that angles on the globe are the same as those measured on the chart. This means that if you draw a straight line on the chart joining your destination with your point of departure, the course to steer will not vary from one end to the other. Such a line is called a rhumb line. It forms the basis of the navigators assumptions for all short-and medium-range passages. If you extend a rhumb line on a Mercator chart so that it transverses an ocean in an east-west direction you will be doing yourself no favours because the shortest distance between two points on a sphere is a great circle. This is a section of a line which, if extrapolated round the sphere and used as a cutting edge, would carve it into two exact halves. Because the meridians are all arcing in towards the Pole, a great circle course cuts each one at a slightly different angle. On a crossing from Newfoundland to the English Channel this results in a course to steer which starts off as 069 and finishes at 093. If you draw the rhumb line course on a Mercator chart it will be straight, but it will be a greater distance in miles because it will not be a great circle. By now you are probably thinking of throwing this book in the waste-paper basket because it is boring, incomprehensible, and irrelevant. Dont do it. You need not concern yourself at all with this business of projections if it doesnt interest you. Most of your charts will be Mercator anyway. Just remember that if you ever need to work out a great circle course you should procure a Gnomonic chart of the ocean concerned. This magic item shows the meridians converging. If you draw a straight line on it, your line is a great circle. All you need to do now is read off the headings at various meridians and alter course accordingly when you get there, if ever you do.
A Gnomonic chart a straight line on this chart is a great circle. Note how this one cuts the meridians at varying angles.
Because Gnomonic charts involve no distortion, they were sometimes used in the past for harbour charts, and may still be found in use. The small scale of harbour charts is such that a heading from one side to the other needs no black trickery to remain straight. For what its worth, you know if the chart is Gnomonic not only because it says so, but because it will have a distance scale somewhere, to compensate for the fact that the latitude scale may be unsuitable for this purpose. The important things to remember about projections are that for everyday Mercator charts, minutess of latitude equal sea miles, and that a rhumb line is not only as straight as you can rule it, it is also the shortest distance between two points. If you are using a Mercator chart of a large area, youll note that the size of a degree of latitude varies as you proceed north or south. In that case, use the latitude nearest your own for distance purposes.
Direction
Having come up with a way of defining positions the next major requirement is to translate a line drawn on the chart joining two locations into a means of knowing that your boat is travelling in the direction this dictates. Wherever you are on the Earth, you will be situated on a meridian of longitude, or one of its subdivisions. If you look directly up it, you will be facing the North Pole. Sight down it, and the South Pole will be ahead. Turning from north to south in a clockwise direction you will traverse 180; continuing on back to north again is a further 180. Thats 360 in all, and this is how a course is designated. If your course line crosses the meridians (all parallel, remember, on a Mercator projection) at 30 to the right of north, your course is 030. Due south is 180; while anything beyond south in a clockwise direction is a greater figure still, up to 359, when you are back to north again. Thus, a course of due west, which is the cardinal point on the left, straight down your parallel of latitude, will be 270. Such a course is designated 270 True, because it relates to the true North Pole which is at the axis point of the Earths rotation. In practice, you will be steering a compass course. One of natures sorrier arrangements is that the magnetic pole to which the compass needle points is considerably displaced from the true pole. It moves with measured tread around the Canadian Arctic. Fortunately, its displacement is tabulated and appears on most charts. If you are working on your chart in degrees true, you must make the necessary corrections to your final result before giving the helmsman a course to steer, but this is easy to do and will be discussed fully in Chapter 16.
Chart symbols
A great number of forms, symbols and conventions are used on charts. Fortunately, most of the important ones can be deciphered with common sense. For the ones which cannot, or those with a specific technical meaning, you will have to refer to the information published by the relevant chart-issuing authority. The UK Hydrographic Office (UKHO) sells theirs in a booklet called Chart 5011. You really shouldnt go to sea without this information. Charts tell you everything from the probable whereabouts of rough water to the material of the seabed. The positions of buoys and lights are noted, together with their flashing characteristics and their colour. Symbols for coastlines, conspicuous hilltops, rocks and off-lying shoals are clearly marked. The depths of the water are denoted by figures known as soundings. All you need is there but you must give yourself access to the symbols.
Chart datums
Most charts carry a statement concerning the datum to which they are constructed. This is nothing to do with the Chart Datum for depth soundings referred to above. It is a convention concerning the pinpointing of position. Because inaccuracies caused by ignoring it are often much less than a cables length (200 metres), it has only become relevant with the arrival of electronic fixing aids. Numerous datums are used worldwide. The UK was for many years OSGB36. Europe was ED, while much of the US worked to WGS84 (World Geodetic System, 1984). Today, most cartographers are lining up with WGS84. A chart will often state that this is the datum. If it is not, you will generally see Lat/Long correction factors for transferring a position derived from a satellite receiver operating to WGS84 (the general default setting). There may also be a statement about the datum to which the chart is drawn. There are three ways of dealing with the question of varying datums: the first is to keep your wits about you, check the chart for correction factors and apply them where necessary. The second is to program your GPS to the relevant datum. With a user-friendly set, this is often the easiest option. The third choice is to expect less from your equipment. Even with the datum shifted, GPS often gives far more accuracy than any pre-electronic sailor could have hoped for. The difference is that he expected little, so he was rarely disappointed.
Yachting charts
In addition to the charts produced by government bodies, many areas of coastline are covered by specialist charts published with yachtsmen in mind. These usually look different from their official counterparts and how you feel about them is a matter of personal taste. They are often, but not always, easy to use, with much additional information. The harbour plans on Imray charts are particularly handy in a small chart library. Some are issued in book form, or in packs dealing with specific areas, offering an inexpensive way of kitting yourself out. In the Scandinavian countries, the USA and others, including parts of Great Britain, official charts are offered for sale packaged like this and priced advantageously. In addition the UKHO and many other countries offer most of their home waters coastal charts as scaled-down small craft editions which are cheaper to buy and are conveniently available from most chandlers.
Electronic charts
The electronic chart plotter uses fully electronic charts. Although many variants exist, these come in two essential formats. The raster chart is to all intents and purposes a scan of its equivalent paper chart. It usually has the same boundaries. It even features the same serial number. Until recently, raster charts in Britain have been based on UKHO Admiralty charts. Now, the private cartography company Imray has begun issuing its own charts in raster format, thus widening the choice. Raster charts have one huge advantage for old salts: they look the same as charts have always done. All their information is visible at any one time and no buttons need be pressed on the plotter to unlock further information. As you zoom in and out on a given chart, nothing changes except the size of the image. In other words, what you see is what you get. And what you see is generally all that most people want. The drawback is that unless the chart kit is quilted, which is to say, melded together electronically, you have to decide physically which chart to use and switch from one to another. For many people myself included this presents no problems at all. They even prefer it. Others find it a nuisance, but even if the charts are quilted, the processor sometimes makes a decision about changing which fails to please the operator. In most cases, raster charts must be used through the medium of a PC plotter. Vector charts are built up by vectoring the survey data from which paper charts are drawn. The process is quite different from the raster scan and resulting charts dont look at all like the paper version created from the same information. Zoom well out on a vector chart and youll find no detail at all, save perhaps the line of the coast. On a good one, however, you can zoom in until you have accessed every scrap of data available anywhere within the scope of that particular chart chip or CD. The process is seamless and, unless you choose to show the borders of an individual chart, with most programs you will not even be aware of them. Vector charts are used exclusively on hardware chart plotters (dedicated units), for which they are issued on small chips, but they are also available on CD-ROM for some PC-based plotter programs. The main benefit of vector charts is accessibility to all available data, and flexibility about how much of it you choose to show (see Electronic chart plotters, Chapter 19). Much of the information remains embedded until you click on an object and enter a menu, so using the charts is not quite as simple as their raster equivalent. The data is comprehensive, however, and may go beyond the size and nature of a navigation aid all the way to a comprehensive tidal curve for a given port on a given day, any time from the Battle of Hastings until what, for all we know, may post-date Armageddon. The drawbacks are that unless you zoom well in, more details remain hidden than may be convenient, yet when you are zoomed in tight enough to access what you want, the overview is lost. The marvels offered by these remarkable charts are explored more fully in Chapter 19.
Chart corrections
The old saying that rocks dont move is, generally speaking, true enough though sandbanks may shift from one month to the next. Buoys, lighthouses, oilrigs and all the rest of the paraphernalia which civilisation has brought to the seas are, however, permanently under review. They are frequently moved, added to, and expunged. Keeping British leisure charts up to date is very easy today. All you need do is log on to www.admiralty.co.uk. Here youll enjoy the remarkable experience of free downloads for all UKHO leisure charts, plus guidance of where to find updates for other cartography. Unfortunately, to correct a full set of charts systematically and conscientiously is not a realistic proposition for many people. As a second best, if your chart is known to be not the newest available, you should check the important lights and day marks against the current list in your Nautical Almanac. Reeds Nautical Almanac carries these, as do some of the others. If you find yourself forced into this, you must be aware that it is a poor substitute for a properly corrected chart, and take any measures which seem appropriate to steer on the safe side of danger. Daily navigation warnings, many of which refer to temporary or permanent alterations in charted information, are broadcast on VHF radio as well as featured in Navtex read-outs. Many electronic plotter suppliers now offer a correction package as a periodic update for all the charts an individual user has paid for. This service is nor universal, so if you are equipping a boat with this gear, the question of chart correction will require consideration. For some systems, corrections are available on disc, removing one of the greatest logistical difficulties from responsible small-craft management.
Other publications
If you are sailing far afield you may want to ship a list of lights and a list of radio signals. Atlases of tidal streams are available, though the information they contain is mainly duplicated in the almanac. Officially published Tide Tables have also become largely redundant for the yachtsman as almanacs have improved. Today, it is more important that you have on board the instruction manuals for your electronics, unless of course you have decided to do without all that. Extracting the full benefit from a modern GPS computer is not something the average person can hope to do without the book in front of him. Just remember while you are achieving computer literacy at your chart table that there is a whole world turning in gloriously organic progress up on deck. How many hundred waypoints you can punch in at a time wont be required knowledge when your inexperienced crew sail you under the bows of a supertanker.
Lighthouses
A lighthouse or a beacon is indicated on the chart by a star which marks its accurate position. Your attention is called to the fact that it is highlighted by a magenta flash shaped like a lozenge with one end pointed. The sharp end is hard by the object it refers to. Adjacent to the star is all the charted information about the light. Any further and better particulars, including a physical description of the structure, will be found in the officially published List of Lights. A light is identified by its so-called characteristics, including the period of its cycle. These are usually arranged so as to be different from any other light in the vicinity. The sequence may be an arrangement of flashes, it could be isophase (in which light and dark periods are equal), occulting (where the light is generally on, and flashes off), or simply fixed on. The permutations of these are many, but they are generally easy both to spot and relate to on the chart. Colours are also used for identifying lights. Unless otherwise stated you can assume that a light is white, but red, green and sometimes yellow are used as well. Details of the various abbreviations used by cartographers can be found below. These are largely self-explanatory, but notice that flashing is Fl, while fixed is F. The two are often confused by stressed navigators.
The height of a light is charted in metres (as a small m) or feet (ft), and this height is given above the level of Mean High Water Springs (see Chapter 14). Its luminous range of visibility is stated in miles (as a capital M). Luminous range is the distance that the light would carry in clear air to an observer unhampered by the Earths curvature. Whether or not you can see it that far away is another matter altogether, and depends upon the relative heights of the light and your eye. Certain publications refer to the nominal range of lights. This is the luminous range as modified by meteorological visibility of 10 nautical miles. Many larger lights will be visible at greater nominal ranges than 10 miles, even in the assumed limited visibility. Sectors and obscuring lines Some lights are only visible within certain angles, owing to their being obscured beyond that by a hill, a headland, or some other feature. This is usually, but not always, noted on the chart. Certain light structures shine different colours into different sectors of their approaches. This is generally used where a specific danger is present whose sphere of influence is defined by a red or a green sector. The coloured sector light may be independent from the main light of the structure in which case it is noted as such in the light description (eg. Fl 5sec 25m 15M FR 12m 5M). Lights of this type are commonplace in Scandinavia where winter pilotage through the inner leads is executed by following from the safe sector of one light into the designated sector of the next, and so on, all the way to the Arctic and beyond. If you see a light charted as having various colours (eg Fl WRG 15s), you will see a single flash every 15 seconds. The colour of the flash is determined by the sector in which you are situated. If the sectors are not defined on your chart, you must refer to your list of lights, your pilot book, or your Nautical Almanac for details. Coloured sectors are often used as leading lines into harbours. Typically, the white will take you safely in. A red sector warns that you are to port of the line, while green shows you have wandered to starboard. In some areas, a light shows with greater intensity when you are on the safe line. If the chart indicates an intensified sector, you will definitely see this when you are in it. The extra brightness is unmistakable. Looms Powerful flashing lighthouses can often be seen below the horizon by virtue of the loom of their light. This sweeps round like a searchlight beam. If conditions are suitable you can identify the characteristics of a loom. Sometimes you can also take a rough bearing, though these must always be treated with caution. A final warning about lighthouses: you will notice that most structures built within living memory are not situated as high as the terrain immediately behind them might have allowed. On the face of things one would assume the higher the better, since the geographic range of the light would thus be maximised. The reason why full advantage is not always taken of this is the prevalence of low cloud, which snuffs a light as effectively as turning off the power. If, therefore, you are looking for a light whose elevation is great and which stubbornly refuses to appear, always bear in mind the possibility that it is lost in the cloud. Fog signals Many lighthouses and some buoys carry a fog signal, activated when the visibility falls below a critical range. These are highly reassuring to any mariner, particularly a non-electronic one, or one who wisely chooses to seek confirmation of his position from beyond the confines of his 12-volt electrical system. There are various types of fog signal, listed below. All have their own distinctive sound. They are indicated by type on the chart, which will also show any time sequence, eg. Horn 60s: one blast on a horn every minute. Sound travels eccentrically in fog, so that it is sometimes confusing to try to pick up the direction of a signal. When you are motoring, station a crew member on the foredeck if conditions permit, because the engine noise will not help you at all back aft. You might consider stopping the motor from time to time for a listening watch. Taking compass bearings on fog signals is rarely practical, but it is usually possible to home in on one, or to note its changing bearings approximately in relation to the yachts head. Wind direction affects the range of a fog signal dramatically. A powerful siren may blow down the breeze for 6 or 7 miles, while a reed trying to penetrate farther than half a mile to windward will usually be unsuccessful. These are the fog signal types most usually found:
Diaphone (Dia) gives a long, drawn-out moan, finishing up with a characteristic grunt. It is often very powerful Horn (horn) gives a steady-pitched sound, varying considerably from one to another Reed (reed) produces a weak and high-pitched sound Siren (siren) is generally higher in pitch than a horn or a diaphone Tyfon (typhon) sounds like a ships siren Nautophone (Naut) electronic produces a high, penetrating note
Offshore marks
Lightships are indicated on the chart by a small ship. The exact position is a diminutive circle at the base of the symbol. The characteristics of the light, which is generally 13 metres above sea level, are shown adjacent to this. Light vessels swing to their moorings and carry an anchor light in their forward rigging just as if they were a regular sea-going vessel at anchor. Because of the expense of manning them, these vessels are now almost all automated, and many are being replaced by Lanbys and light floats, A light float is smaller than a lightship and often carries a less powerful light. If it is an important one, the chart will inform you as to its range and elevation as well as its characteristic light pattern. A Lanby (Large Automated Navigation Buoy) is exactly what it says it is. It consists of a circular floating platform 12 metres in diameter on which is raised a trellis mast with a powerful light 12 metres above the water. Lanbys are controlled from shore stations and would seem a sensible replacement for the lightship except that their motion is so extreme that servicing them is an extraordinarily onerous task. High focal plane buoys are often used to mark offshore dangers, or safe water. These are exactly the same as any other pillar buoy, except that they are bigger than those normally used inshore. Some of them have quite powerful lights but even those whose beam can be seen at 7 miles do not have their range listed on the chart, though they may be found in the relevant list of lights. In offshore areas of considerable shoaling, ordinary buoys of the larger sizes will be found.
Inshore marks
Lateral marks are used to indicate channels. Occasionally one is used singly to show that you must pass to one particular side of it. Colour and shape determine whether a lateral mark is to be left to port or starboard. They may be buoys or beacons, but in either case if they are ambiguous in shape they will have a topmark which is not. Sadly, all the world does not conform to one arrangement of lateral marks. The North Americans leave red to starboard and green to port going up a harbour, travelling shorewards up a channel or, in the absence of anything more positive, proceeding in a clockwise direction around the continent. In Europe under the IALA (International Association of Lighthouse Authorities) system, the opposite is standard. At least it is only colour which is reversed. On both sides of the Atlantic, port-hand buoys are flat topped or can shaped; starboard ones are cones, or nuns. This means that in the US, a distant mark with a triangular topmark whose colour is as yet indeterminate should be left to starboard, as in Europe. As it comes closer it will turn out to be red, while under the IALA system it would be green. North Americans remember the colour by the mnemonic, Red Right Returning. So long as Europeans remember that, then reverse it for home waters (No Red Port Left), there is no problem. Starboards are cones in both cases, and ports are cans. Have a can of Port, old chap! Personally I like mine in a glass, but there you are. Throughout the world, special marks are yellow; so are their lights. They can be various shapes, but every effort is made to conform this with the marks position in relation to other marks, if this is relevant. Generally speaking, red marks carry red lights; greens carry green; and yellow are always yellow.
Navigation marks
Safe water marks such as fairway buoys are universally red and white vertically striped with a white light, but in North America they flash Morse code A while IALAs may be isophase, occulting or one long flash every 10 seconds. Isolated dangers are marked in IALA areas by vertical marks with horizontal black and red bands, with two vertically arranged balls as a topmark. Balls-up is the mnemonic for remembering this, which is certainly what you will experience if you ignore the warning it represents. Such marks are lit with a group flash 2, which corresponds to the balls. IALA cardinal marks are shown clearly below. A north mark stands to the north of a hazard, and so on. Therefore, if you come across, say, a south mark and you cannot find it on the chart to check its relevance to your life, you will be safe if you pass to the south of it. At first sight, cardinal marks look complicated to remember. Actually they are very easy indeed. The north marks topmark points up, or to the north; the south ones point south. The west topmarks look suspiciously like a bobbin (a below), so remember, West Winds Wool. If you cant get along with the borne knitting, just think of a Wasp-waisted Woman, which it also looks like if you prefer your ladies without heads. For the classical scholar, the east mark puts one in mind of the letter E in a carved inscription, thus (b below).
(a)
(b )
So far so good, but what about the disposition of yellow and black? The answer is that the points of the topmarks point towards the black. Look at the diagram and youll see what I mean. The black is all at the top on the north mark, all at the bottom on the south, all in the middle of the Wasp-waisted Woman, and at the out sides of the diamond. The lights are white and go round the clock-face: east is at 3 oclock, and flashes in groups of 3; south is 6 (plus a long one to ensure there is no mistake); west is 9; and north should be 12 but no one could be expected to count that many flashes, so it just keeps going continuously. The IALA cardinal system is one of the greatest bonuses to navigation for many decades. It is easy to operate and utterly unambiguous. Whether or not you obey the instructions of a marker will depend on your draught and your general intentions, but whenever you see one you should identify its type and check it visually to ensure that it coincides with what you expect from your chart. If you find an anomaly, see it through to the end, or you may live to wish that you had. Sometimes you can pass the wrong side of a set of lateral buoys in order to avoid close encounters with large vessels which must treat them conventionally. Learn your signposts and use them intelligently. Weve come a long way since the Norsemen built their cairns on the outer skerries of Norway.
The sun, the moon and the tide. (a) Full moon spring tide: gravitational fields in a straight line (b ) New moon spring tide: gravitational fields still lined up. (c) Half moon neap tide: gravitational fields in opposition to one another.
In fact, as with all terrestrial effects generated by astronomical forces, a time lapse attaches to the days when the largest and smallest tides occur. In this case it is a couple of days or so, which means that the large tides known as springs turn up a day or two after full moon and at new moon; ditto with the small tides, or neaps. Notice that the term spring has nothing to do with the season of the year. The biggest tides of all occur in spring and autumn because the equinoctial sun is nearest the equator and exerts its best pull, so perhaps this is the origin of the nomenclature. I can offer no better explanation.
Tide tables
Every maritime nation of any importance works up its own tidal predictions through its observatories. These are made generally available as official publications, but most yachtsmen prefer to acquire them as part of the universally useful nautical almanac. If you intend never to sail far from your home port, you may be able to manage with the local tide table booklet issued by most major harbour authorities for a handful of small change. If you are away cruising, you must have an up-to-date almanac. Tide tables are almost entirely self-explanatory. They normally give the times of High and Low Water at the port in question for every day throughout the year. Heights are given in feet or metres above Chart Datum which, as we have seen in Chapter 12, is also the level of Lowest Astronomical Tide. Times are worthy of careful attention. If you are operating within a single country these rarely present any practical problems, but if you change from one state to the next, you must remember to reset your watch or you may be an hour out in your workings. British Admiralty tide tables, or their almanac equivalent, give UK waters times in GMT UT as it is now officially known. Foreign ports are stated in the relevant Zone Time. Never forget to add 1 hour to the tabulated figures as required for daylight saving time (BST) if you are working with the Admiralty Tide Tables or any of the almanacs derived from these. The English-speaking almanacs even give you the date to change your watch, but they dont advise about continental summer times. That remains a personal initiative test. Some tables issued by local authorities do this job for you and give all tides in local clock time. For example, the Eldridge Tide and Pilot on the US East Coast conveniently serves up Eastern Standard Time or Daylight Time as appropriate. None of this business of time is at all difficult; just dont forget it exists, thats all.
Secondary ports
You wouldnt be able to find shelf space for an almanac with a page for the tides of every port. There are too many of them. The problem is solved by the system known as secondary ports. Any lesser port is referred to in terms of how its tidal activity differs in detail from the nearest standard port for which the tides are fully tabulated. Different almanacs give secondary-port data in various ways, but it is normally set out with time differences in one column and height difference in the next. In some areas time and height differences remain constant for a given secondary port. Often, however, they vary depending upon whether the tide in question is a spring or a neap. Differences for such ports are given in relation to MHWS (Mean High Water Springs), MHWN (Neaps), etc.
In the greater tides of northern Europe, the tidal difference is given in relation not only to springs and neaps, but also in terms of the actual zone time of High and Low Water. This sounds complicated, but if you look at the illustration for differences on London Bridge (above), youll see that it is really quite straightforward. In practice, one rarely ends up with a time that is given in the secondary-port information. Normally you want one somewhere in between. In these cases you must interpolate. Thus, if you want the time difference at Tilbury and the time is 0600 (above), you are three hours into the six (0300 to 0900) given at the top of the column. The difference for Tilbury at 0300 is 55 minutes. At 0900 it is 40 minutes. The difference therefore diminishes by 15 minutes in 6 hours, which is 2 minutes per hour. By 0600 it will have dropped by 2 minutes multiplied by 3, or 7 minutes, so the difference at 0600 is going to be 47 minutes. The negative sign shows that this is subtracted from the London Bridge time to find the time at Tilbury. Height differences require similar interpolation in these cases. They are given at springs and neaps, but often you are halfway in between. European tables give mean spring and neap ranges on the tidal curves. If you cant find these, or there arent any, it is easy enough to run your fingers down a months tidal heights and see how yours compares with the highest and the lowest. Once you have this information, common sense can be applied to the problem and a surprisingly accurate answer produced in your head. In the US, but not in Canada, height differences are stated as a ratio. The figure (expressed as a decimal, eg 0.91) is multiplied into the tidal height given for the standard port and that is your secondary port figure for the day. The system is simple to operate and works well for the moderate tides generally experienced. When it comes to interpolation, practice undoubtedly helps you to do the sums in your head. An experienced navigator invariably does this very successfully. The answer is to set yourself problems to solve. This is not hard to arrange, and can be done to pass a winters evening when a power cut snuffs out the TV, conversation drags, and you have only one candle left.
Tidal definitions
The figure below shows the various heights of tide which must be defined. Most of these have been discussed already, but tidal range has not. The range of a tide is the amount by which that particular tide rises or falls between High Water and Low Water. The height of tide at any given moment, including High and Low Water, is the level by which the tide is standing above Chart Datum. The rise of tide is the level that the tide has reached above the Low Water figure for that particular tide, while charted height is the clearance under a bridge or power cable at MHWS.
Tidal definitions
Tidal height curve for Shoreham (Extract taken from Reeds Nautical Almanac).
Range = 4.8 metres (5.81.0) 1/12 = 0.4 metres (4.8/12) At 1700, 3/12 of the range will have risen (1/12 in the first hour, 2/12 in the second). 3/12 = 1.2 metres. Therefore, at 1700 there will be 1.2 metres above the figure given in the tide tables for Low Water (1.0 metre). Rise is added to the Low Water figure to find height, so at 1700 the height of tide will be 2.2 metres above Chart Datum.
Tidal curves
In the absence of any more accurate method being offered, the Rule of Twelfths can usually be used with moderate success. However, in certain areas (notably the UK, Ireland and Northern Europe generally) the tides do not conform perfectly to the sine wave principle. Sometimes the rising and falling of the waters appear eccentric in the extreme. These places are best served by a graph showing accurately what is going on. Spring and neap curves Notice the mean range box at the top right-hand corner of the diagram giving spring and neap ranges, with a firm and a pecked line depicted alongside it. The tide curve with the solid line is the curve for spring tides and that with a pecked line is for neaps. You can ascertain rapidly by inspection whether todays rise is a spring or a neap, or somewhere near. If it falls between the two, you will use an imaginary curve between the solid and the pecked ones. This can easily be done by estimation to a degree of accuracy more than adequate for safe navigation. No interpolation sums are required in practice. The set-up Whatever question you want to answer (question, you notice there are no more problems), you start out by preparing the diagram for use on a given tide. Suppose we are setting it up for a day when the figures for the morning tide were as follows: HW 4.3m LW 0.5 m range 3.8 m
Notice straightaway that todays range, 3.8 m, falls between the spring range of 5.5 m and the neap range of 3.1 m given in the mean range box. Now in order to set up the diagram, draw a line (the line of the day) joining the height of Low Water at the bottom of the left-hand part of the picture with High Water at the top, and fill in the boxes beneath the curves for High Water and any other times of interest. Once you have done this, you are ready to ask your question which will probably be one of the following: 1. At what time will there be a given height of tide? 2. What will be the height of tide at a given time?
Let us take a first and be more specific: At what time on that particular morning will the tide at Shoreham have fallen to a height of 2.8 m above Chart Datum? To find the answer you draw three straight lines, as illustrated above. 1. Starting at 2.8 in at the top of the diagram you drop a perpendicular (a) to your line of the day. 2. From where line (a) joins the line of the day, you draw a line (b) across to the tide falling side of the tide curve. 3. From where line (b) joins the tide falling curve, you drop line (e) straight down to the time boxes, and there is the answer to your question. In this case, 0409. Question b could he posed for the purposes of our example by simply reversing question a, in which case it would sound like this: To what height will the tide at Shoreham have fallen by about 0410? To answer this, you start (having set up the picture as above) at the other end with the time of 0409. From here you raise a perpendicular (line (c)) to the tide curve. Then draw in line (b) across the line of the day and from there you shoot up vertically (line (a)) to the height of tide scale and read off the height of 2.8 m. Youll have noticed by now that you dont have to do anything to the figure for tide height that you extract from the diagram in answer to question b. The figure of 2.8 m is the actual height of water above Chart Datum; that is all there is to it. If you are going in the other way, as in question a, you enter the height of water you need in addition to the charted depth and the diagram gives the time figure you are after. Once the time of day is set up, low water does not enter your calculations. It takes a minute or two to set up the diagram and thereafter you can find the height of tide within seconds. Secondary ports The one small fly that remains kicking feebly in the ointment is the old favourite of secondary ports. The system for working these out probably cant be improved upon. Just work out the time and height of High or Low Water for your secondary port and enter it on the diagram exactly as above. If you are operating in the areas adjacent to and including the Solent youll find that, because of the tidal anomalies caused by the Isle of Wight, several extra sets of curves are supplied for the various groups of secondary ports. The only difference between these and all the other curves in the book is that, instead of working either side of High Water, they use Low Water as their point of reference. The time of Low Water is easier to predict in this region than that of the double High.
Fill in the tidal curve for the day, bearing in mind that the next Low Water is the critical factor. Decide the depth you will need to remain safely afloat at Low Water. This will he the yachts draught + the clearance selected. Consult the tidal curve and see how much the tide will fall between now and the next Low Water, even if the tide is rising at the moment. There is no need even to consider such matters as charted depth. Add this Figure to the depth you have decided upon for Low Water. Sail in until you find this depth, then anchor. That is all there is to it. Having ascertained the depth at which to drop the hook, now is the time to decide how much cable to lay. Sort out a suitable scope (usually about three times the depth of water for chain cable), then determine what the total depth will be at the next High Water. Consult the tidal curve to see how much the tide will rise by the time of High Water, even if the level is falling when you arrive. Add this figure to your anchoring depth. The total will be the depth at High Water. Alternatively, you could simply add the range of the tide (High Water minus Low Water) to the depth you aim to be floating in at Low Water (Draught + Clearance). The result should confirm your other calculation.
Tidal gates
Even in areas where the currents are generally weak, if there is any rise and fall of tide to speak of, places will emerge where the current becomes a significant factor. Where streams along the coast are strong in any case, salient headlands and narrow channels may produce violent currents for the mariner to contend with. Such places are known as tidal gates and it is important to time your arrival at them either for slack water if the sea is known to become dangerously rough, or for the period of fair tide. In sea areas such as North Brittany, where the current gallops along at 4 knots even well offshore, the whole coast becomes a tidal gate. Fortunately, with such a stream running favourably, a good boat can make a considerable distance in a fair tide, then anchor up while the stream runs foul. This enables you to take a rest, a meal, a run ashore and be ready for the next fair tide in six hours or so. Tiding along like this is good fun, low on stress, and makes for acceptable progress. It is far better for morale than staying at sea and sailing on the spot for a quarter of a day. Knowing the rate and direction of the tidal stream forms a vital part of cross-tide navigation, but this will be discussed fully in Chapter 20.
Personal observation
Tide tables are all right, and GPS can be very helpful, but for accurate information you cant beat your own eyes. Around the turn of the tide, look for direct evidence. A lobster pot marker is the best atlas in the world. If youre moored, dont look in the book, look over the side. In thick fog, if you come upon a buoy, stem the tide alongside it. When the situation has become stable, read your log and your compass. The log gives you the speed of the stream, your compass offers you the reciprocal of its direction. No tide tables or GPS can beat that, but remember that your information is similar in one respect to that given by a diamond. Two hundred metres away, things may nor be quite the same. Look at the terrain on the chart and make an intelligent guess, then plot your next heading, but leave a wide margin for error all the same.
The compass
Over the centuries there have been various navigational breakthroughs which have provided a huge increase in the security of the mariner. The use of man-made satellites is a recent example, but it pales before the quantum leap offered by the publication of the first charts. Useful though these were, they did not outshine the arrival of the concept of longitude which took place some centuries earlier. Even these are nothing compared with the compass. The Vikings may have contrived to cross the Atlantic without one, but to describe their navigation as hit and miss would be less than half right, because they missed far more regularly than they hit. During the last century or two the compass has become capable of extreme accuracy, so long as it is properly installed and used. A number of factors affect its readings. Some can be removed, others you must live with. The first is variation.
Variation
The theory of magnetic variation was expounded in Chapter 12, but little was said about coping with it in practice. Variation is a factor which we cant change. We must therefore allow for it in our workings by knowing exactly what it is doing to our compass reading. It differs, depending upon where you are. Some areas have east deviation, others west, but it is always charted, so at least you know what is going on. There will be numerous occasions when you have worked up a course in degrees true (ie. with north and south straight up and down the meridian), but you need to hand it up to the helmsman in degrees magnetic. A magnetic heading is the true heading corrected for variation, and if your compass reads accurately, that is the heading you will actually use. Similarly, a bearing taken with a compass will be magnetic, but you may wish to plot it in degrees true. You therefore require a simple, foolproof way of converting one to the other. The most logical way of doing this, until it becomes second nature, is to draw a small diagram (below). Here, the variation is 9 west and the heading is 210 (true). By sketching in the lines around the circle from the true north and the magnetic north it is immediately obvious that the magnetic heading is greater than the true by 9, giving a course to steer of 219M. Drawing b indicates a 9E variation, with the angle between magnetic north and the course being that much smaller than that from the true north. The course to steer here would be 201M.
If you dont have a pictorial mind, you may prefer one of the standard aides-mmoires. My favourite is: Error West, compass best Error East, compass least For best read biggest, and you have a foolproof system which conforms perfectly to the diagram. If the compass is best with the error on the west side of true north (magnetic greater than true), it follows that the true heading will be less than the magnetic, should you be converting that way. Error East, compass least (magnetic less than true) means also that the true is greater than the magnetic with east variation. Here are two worked examples: (1) Course to steer is 248T. Variation is 7W. What is the compass heading? 248T + 7W (Error West, compass best) = 255M (2) Flashy Point light bears 355. Variation is 10E. What is the true bearing? 355M + 10E (Error East, compass least. Error is therefore added back to convert from compass to true) = 365T This of course is nonsense. The correct way of expressing it is 365T360T = 005T
Deviation
The other major factor affecting a compass is deviation. This is an error originating from within the boat. Any ferrous metal affects a compass to a certain extent. If it is too close (say, either 1 to 2 metres in a horizontal direction) the results will be noticeable. Deviation, unlike variation, is not only undesirable, it can be minimised by your own efforts. Site the steering compass intelligently and dont leave screwdrivers, battery driven appliances, radio speakers and other magnetically active bric--brac scattered around it. If youve done this successfully on a GRP production cruiser you may end up with little discernible deviation. On other craft, though, youll have some left for sure. If your yacht is steel, or ferrocement, there will be plenty. The first thing to do about deviation is to try to get rid of it. This is achieved by employing the services of a compass adjuster. He will come along with his magic toolbag and work his miracles with compensating magnets. If you want to try this for yourself, buy a book on the subject or go to college, but dont ask me to help. Its a very skilled and specialised job. The compass adjuster will leave you a deviation card which shows how you can now expect your compass to perform. Look at this and youll see that, unlike variation, deviation varies with the yachts heading. This makes sense when you realise that since the boat is effectively turning round under a stationary compass card, the relationship between the north pointer and the boats ironwork will vary.
A deviation card.
Deviation is expressed in degrees E or W of the vessels magnetic heading. Thus, if you dial up your course in degrees true you must convert this to magnetic before consulting your deviation card for the final adjustment to compass. If you are correcting the other way, the opposite process is required, again with magnetic in the middle. A true heading to which variation and deviation have been applied is called a compass heading. In practice, all this is simple to deal with, so dont be daunted. Theres a wonderful mnemonic, beloved of all sailors, which goes like this: True = True Virgins apply Variation (error west, compass best etc) Make gives Magnetic Dull apply Deviation Companions gives Compass If you are converting from compass through to true and you happen to be British, Cadburys Dairy Milk Very Tasty will stand you in good stead. If you are not a native of Blighty you will never have heard of this noble confection, so youll either have to come up with something else, or reverse your True Virgins. Swinging the compass Even if the compass adjuster has visited you within the last year, you should still swing your own compass at least once every season or when your cruises take you through a change of latitude of more than 10 degrees. Unlike compass adjusting, swinging is not a black art. It can be successfully achieved by any two people, given a hand-bearing compass, a calm sea and an identifiable object at least three miles away. You dont have to know what this actually is, because youll only be using it as a reference point. The steering compass is swung by comparing it with the hand-bearing compass on various headings, having first ensured that the hand-bearing compass is sited so as to be free of deviation. This requirement is achieved by finding a site where magnetic interference is liable to be at a minimum. It is checked by noting the bearing of the distant object with the hand-bearing compass as you steer the boat in a slow, tight circle. The change in the yachts position in relation to the object will be unmeasurable in terms of angle, so if the bearing stays the same you have proved your hand-bearing compass in that location. If the bearing wanders as the heading swings, try again from another part of the deck until you succeed, as you will sooner or later in any but the most difficult of craft. All that now remains is to steer the yacht on a suitable selection of headings around the whole circle while your mate sights dead ahead with the handbearing compass from the chosen place on deck. He, of course, will be reading the correct magnetic headings. Compare each one with the reading of the steering compass. The difference is the deviation. If the steering compass shows a larger figure than the hand-bearing compass, the deviation is West, and vice versa. When all sixteen headings have been noted, plot them on your deviation card and set course for a better landfall. The job can be
readily tackled anywhere that you find yourself with a spare half hour.
Heeling error
When a yacht is heeled, the relative position of her compass and the ironmongery which is deviating it may change enough to affect its reading. This is known as heeling error. I have never been on board a yacht, large or small, cheap or expensive, which boasted a table for this. Indeed, to contemplate arranging for one would be totally unrealistic. This does not mean that heeling error will go away. The best way to deal with it is to check it on passage against the hand-bearing compass. When you are on a long leg where the compass counts, ask your mate to take the hand-bearing compass to the site you used for compass swinging and check the yachts heading. Any difference between the two compasses which is not anticipated from the deviation card is the heeling error. Youll have to hope that the hand-bearing compass is not being affected by this as well as the steering compass, but that is a fairly safe assumption. The error wont amount to more than a degree or two at most in all normal circumstances.
Compass dip
The magnetic field which determines the direction in which the compass needle points does nor always run conveniently parallel to the Earths surface. In higher latitudes it dives in towards the Earth at a considerable angle, and of course the compass needle tries to follow it. The needles bearings constrain it from doing this, but the fact that it is trying renders its movements ever more sluggish until, in certain areas, the compass stops working altogether. Sailors in moderate latitudes need not be concerned with this, but if you are planning an epic voyage into the ice, it will be a factor for consideration.
The log
Given that you know the direction in which you have been travelling, the next vital ingredient of dead reckoning classical navigation is how far you have come. This is ascertained by using a log. In ancient times, mariners literally guessed their distance run. Having made a number of ocean crossings myself without using a log, I can testify to the surprising accuracy of a well-tuned observers eye aboard a ship with which he is familiar. However, since any instrument should be an improvement over no instrument, it wasnt long before mariners came up with a system of measurement. The original type of log still in use well into the nineteenth century worked on speed per hour, which, multiplied by the number of hours until the next reading, gave the distance run. Except in a racing yacht, distance run is what the navigator usually wants. Speed is only of interest if you are shaping a course and need to predict how far you may travel in the next hour. Your speed now in a sailing boat gives no more help with your ETA than how far you ran in the last hour. Speed is merely useful as a means of determining distance. The present fixation with we did 8.7 knots today sounds rather like a schoolboy boasting that his fathers car is capable of 103 mph, according to the makers propaganda. Both pieces of information are largely irrelevant in real life. The original log worked as follows: a fan-shaped log chip attached to a knotted line wound on to a reel was hove over the stern of the ship. The chip, or log, held its position in the water and dragged out the line as the ship sailed away from it. The knots in the line were made at intervals representing 1 nautical mile per hour. If 8 knots ran out in a given time, measured by a sand-glass, the vessel was logging 8 nautical miles per hour. Hence the term knot and hence the name log which is still attached to the most sophisticated electronic distance measuring device. The trailing log These mechanical devices, still used by some yachts (including my own), are a major step up from the old log chip arrangement. They work by towing a fish shaped so that it will rotate at a known rate, from a simple analogue measuring device attached to the aft part of the vessel. Distance run is usually measured, realistically, to the nearest mile. These instruments are reliable and accurate. If yours over-reads or under-reads it will at least be consistent, so that once this is known, you can correct its readings as easily as you would a watch that reads fast. The fact that you must actively stream such a log, and haul it in again, is no nuisance at all. If you are piloting in good weather and you can see where you are, you dont need a log anyway, so you can leave it in the box. Bring it out when land fades away astern, or when the mist thickens. The very act of streaming a trailing log forms a punctuation mark in any passage which says, From now on, we take the navigation seriously. Dont wrap the log-line around your propeller, watch out for weed on the fish, and beware of its readings if it is in direct line astern of the propeller and you are under power. With these provisos, no better system has yet been devised for the cruising yacht. Inexpensive and reliable, a quality trailing log such as the Walker Excelsior may not supply the data required to run linked functions, but it remains a joy to use. Electronic logs offer the advantage of no moving parts except for the tiny, spinning impeller. Some dont even have one of those, operating by measuring Doppler effect instead. The majority of yachts nowadays have an electronic log of some sort. For the most part they work well. Some are better than others, some seem prone to weed attacking their impellers, but they all give you a lovely big dial to tell you what you rarely need to know: your water speed. They do read distance in tenths of a mile, though, which is handy. Some of them purport to read in hundredths, which is of no use to anyone except electronic man who is so misinformed about the real world that he wants to know where he is to the nearest 20 metres while on passage. Even for close-in pilotage, such promise of accuracy can be a snare. The log can only read distance through the water, so if you rely on it amongst the rocks in a tideway, you are bilged for certain. If you have an electronic log, for goodness sake study the instruction book. I could tell you of a number of navigators who have dumped their allimportant distance run at the punch of a wrong button. If a shark chomps off your trailing log you will at least know where you were when it happened, because the beast doesnt generally flop aboard and zero your log dial to complete the job. Calibrating a log Some logs can be calibrated to remove error. If yours cannot, there is no cause for concern, so long as you know whats going on. In either case, you should be empirically aware of its performance. The traditional way to calibrate the log is to take a two-way run down a measured mile at slack water. Divide the results in half and compare the answer with the charted distance. The difference is the log error. Either correct it out, or note it in your log book and apply it in the future. The hard reality is that with the added security of GPS, few yacht skippers actually do this any more, but the subject must not be ignored. The main reason for having a log is to provide data for cross-checking GPS, and to look after us should it fail. In either case, we need to know what its doing, so calibrate it we still must. Fortunately, any GPS receiver will read out SOG or Speed over the ground. Choose a calm day, wait for slack water (note that no current is running past a handy buoy), motor steadily ahead at a moderate speed, then read the log manual and twiddle the knobs until its reading coincides with the SOG. Nothing is simpler, yet many people dont take the trouble and some silly boat speeds are recorded as a result. A final balance is to compare logged passage distances with the charted or GPS distances over an extended period. Having taken due account of any tide or current, does it over-read consistently, or under-read, or neither? Whatever the case, so long as you see a noticeable pattern, you can adjust your future log readings with a confident sense of realism.
Depth
The third essential navigational input is depth. We have already discussed something of the meaning of depth as it relates to tidal height, but the reality of how much water you have underneath you is only truly revealed by some sort of measuring device. The lead-line Every boat should have one of these. Not only does it provide vital back-up when the echo sounder goes down, it can also be carted off in the dinghy to sound difficult entrances or to see whether you will swing clear of a shoal while anchored. It also gives an absolutely accurate reading, so when you are alongside a berth which may dry, you can be sure of your ground. A lead-line need not be an elaborate affair. Traditionally, the various units were marked with pieces of leather or bunting, together with various other items you were called upon to commit to memory. Unless you are using it as your primary source of information (and there are still people who do), you dont need to go to these lengths. Just have a line 20 metres long, and knot it at whatever intervals seem appropriate to your needs. One extra knot at the boats exact draught will prove exceedingly useful. A traditional lead has a dimple in the bottom which you can arm with tallow or, failing that, engine grease or even margarine. This will bring up a sample of the bottom for your perusal. Fishermen used to find their way round the North Sea with only a compass and a lead, literally sniffing and tasting the samples. For us, its enough to know what we are anchoring in.
Leeway
Any boat sailing with the wind on or forward of the beam makes leeway. In fact, she makes it all the time except when the wind is dead aft, but it becomes much less significant once the wind is abaft the beam. How much leeway you make depends on the boat, the wind and the sea. A powerful 12 metre (40 ft) cruiser hard on the wind in force 4 (15 knots) and a calm sea makes only 2 or 3, while a 7 metre (22 ft) bilge-keel yacht trying to hack to windward in force 6 (28 knots) could be sliding off at 20 or more.
Leeway.
The only way of determining your leeway is to look at your wake in relation to the fore-and-aft line of your boat. If its dark and you cant see it, guess 7 when you are going to windward in moderate conditions for your boat and you probably wont be too disappointed. When you have a good view of the proceedings you might try to measure leeway by comparing a compass bearing of your wake with the reciprocal of your heading, or by holding a plotter up to your eye to turn your guesstimate into an empirical assessment. When the going is rough and danger lies to leeward never risk underestimating leeway. To do so is far too easy and the results of a mistake can be very nasty indeed When plotting an EP, you should always apply leeway to your heading. This makes it into a water track and shows where you have actually been through the water. The line which appears on the chart with the modified DR at the end of it should be the water track rather than the heading. If you try to draw both, or even part of both, the result could be confusing. Stick to the water track, then youll always know what youve plotted and there will be no ambiguity. Mark it on the chart with a single arrowhead half-way along its length. The practicalities of this are straightforward. Lay your plotter on the chart against the last known position, indicating your heading. Now imagine the wind blowing across the chart. Swivel the plotter around the point of departure so that it turns downwind through however many degrees you have decided. Now draw in your water track along its edge.
A two-hour EP.
If you are beating to windward you will be tacking at all sorts of odd times in order to work your wind shifts (Chapter 21). The last thing you want is to be plotting an EP every time you go about, because youll find yourself trying to work out some impossible fractions just at a time when you feel least like doing so. Instead, note the times and log readings of all your tacks in the log book, keep a commonsense eye on where you are, then when you are ready, plot a compound EP (above). All you need do is plot all your DRs (allowing for leeway), one after the other. When you reach the last one, plot all the tide vectors for the various one-hour periods your run has involved onto this final DR position. Plot the tide vectors one after another also, then lay your EP on the end of the last one. The job can be done very smartly indeed.
Plotting
It is well worth the effort to take real pride in the neatness of your chartwork. Conventional plotting as described above is not only a joy to behold, it is unambiguous, not only for you, but for any other proper navigator who may wish to take over the plot, no matter what his nationality. It has been suggested that when we come face to face with our first extra-terrestrial aliens, we will communicate in the universal language of pure mathematics, but I believe that it is the navigators who will be the first to break through the silence. Ill bet a forenoon watch to a middle watch that Martian pilots draw three arrow-heads on their set and drift vectors as they cruise through the asteroid belt.
Angle of cut.
A single PL defines your position in one direction only. You need to know how far along it you are, and you do this by finding a second PL which crosses it at a useful angle. If the angle is too narrow, the error in position generated by a small departure from accuracy can be disproportionately large. A good angle of cut ensures only the minimum of position distortion from a small inaccuracy. If the error in one of your PLs is large, however, even a good cut wont help you, and if you only have two lines, youll never know. A third PL cutting both the first two at a satisfactory angle gives you the check you need and produces the classic 3 point fix resulting in a cocked hat on the chart. It is rare indeed for all the PLs to intercept at a single point. More normally, there is a small triangle in whose vicinity you are probably situated at the time. Theoretically, a cocked hat is the inevitable result of three position lines being taken, unless they were noted simultaneously by three different observers on board, because you will have moved on between the
time of the first and the third PL. Often a reasonably tight cocked hat is all you need. Draw a circle round it with the time noted beside it. Now log it, check it against the depth of water, then shape your next course from it. If you need the greatest possible accuracy because of the presence of a danger either now, or close to your projected course, you should always assume the worst position the cocked hat allows. If one corner of it places you closer to danger than the others, that is where you must assume you are. Any discrepancy of your actual position from this into the safer areas of your cocked hat will thus be a bonus in terms of security. Sometimes, a cocked hat is so big you just cant get along with it at all, particularly if all the PLs are compass bearings. When this happens, scrap it and take your bearings again, making sure this time that you hold the hand-bearing compass well away from magnetic influences. These may include your spectacles, the binoculars, and anything else which adorns your person. Now ascertain that youve applied variation the right way and if you still plot a poor result, start wondering whether you are taking bearings of the right objects. Even if there is no mistake you can still show indifferent results when the distance is great, eg. 3 error gives rise to 100 metres lateral displacement of your PL at a range of one mile from the object. At 10 miles this increases to half a mile. It isnt difficult to build in such an error when the boat is rolling around and you are struggling to read the swinging compass card. Electronic fixing systems work on PLs in a similar manner to any other fixing method. The difference is that PLs derived from GPS satellites are potentially capable of phenomenal accuracy. The cocked-hat work is done for you inside the box, so that all you receive is what you want a position. If you are going to navigate electronically it remains important that you are aware of the classical systems for back-up purposes if nothing else. The traditional navigator used these constantly, so determining how to fix his position on a given occasion was second nature. The danger of always navigating through a computer is that you fail to develop these essential skills. When you need them, it will be too late to start, so study them now
If there is no formal transit, there is nothing to stop you lining up two conspicuous charted objects and working out your own. A church lined up with a pier end is a wonderful transit, as is the cliff edge of an island brought in line with a buoy. There is no end to the transits an imaginative observer can find. Buoys drift a few metres around their moorings, so are not quite so accurate as an object ashore or founded upon the sea bed, but they are usually better when lined up with a shore feature than used merely to provide a compass bearing. Always use transits where you can. Nothing beats them for accuracy, including GPS. They are also absolutely free of charge, and no one can ever switch them off. One final reminder: if you are in the slightest doubt about the identification of your transit, take a bearing on it with your compass. You know what it should be. Even if it seems a degree or two out, the compass will confirm it. If the discrepancy is more than 3 or 4, take another look. Compass bearings In the absence of a transit, a compass bearing is usually the next best way of acquiring a PL. Make sure you are plotting it correctly. It doesnt matter whether you plot in degrees true or magnetic, so long as you are clear in your own mind what you are doing. Some plotters make it easy to lay a magnetic bearing on the chart, others do not. If in doubt, keep your chartwork in degrees true, but no one would fail a yachtmaster examination for doing it the other way, so long as he got it right. When noting bearings, or courses to steer, it pays to develop the habit of always using a suffix of T (True), M (Magnetic) or C (Steering compass) after the number of degrees. If you write Church bears 035M, there can be no possible confusion. Dont forget, the closer the object, the better your fix is likely to be. Dont go mad, though. If the object is near enough at hand to guess its distance with enough accuracy for your needs, you have only to take its bearing to complete your fix. Shore objects are generally better than buoys, which may occasionally be off station. The more important a buoy, the more reliable it usually is. Depth soundings Wherever the bottom is of such a nature that it forms clear contour lines, your echo sounder is a source of PLs. Reduce the depth to soundings, then inspect the chart. Your PL is the relevant contour, none the worse for not being so straight as a transit. If your depth places you between two charted contours, youll have to judge where yours is most likely to be. The nature of things is such that contours are rarely so precisely defined as a transit leading mark. Even if your PL is effectively a cable wide, however, it may be all you have to make up the second PL of a two-point fix, so dont despise it. Every time you take a fix you should hit the button of the echo sounder as a guard against gross error. It isnt usually necessary to reduce to soundings for these purposes. Just have a quick look. If the depth in the vicinity of your fix is seriously adrift from what the chart says it should be, then as with an EP, something is wrong.
Use of depth sounding as a position tine: a rough fix is obtained by crossing a bearing with sounding line.
Circular position lines There is nothing in the rules which says a PL must be straight. We have just seen how it can be not only meandering, but a hundred metres or more across, as in the case of some depth contours. An extremely useful circular PL can be constructed from a distance off an object. Visually, it is possible to determine this in two ways. When the distance off is known, a circle of position can be scribed around the object on the chart. A section of this circle may be used to provide a second PL where it cuts a compass bearing of the object (always at a convenient right angle), and create a fine two-point fix. The first method of finding a circular PL requires no instruments at all, just an almanac and an assessment of the height of your eye above sea-level. If you know the height of a lighthouse (from your chart), you can enter the tables given in the almanac for lights rising and dipping to ascertain how far off it you will be when it rises above, or dips beneath, the horizon. This gives you your range. Take a bearing on a light as it first appears, and you have an initial landfall fix. If you are using electronics, this will give you an excellent check on your computer; if not, it may well be the last fix youll have for some time, until the lesser shore lights begin popping up as you close the coast.
If youre only seeing the light from the tops of the waves, you must make an assessment of the total wave height, divide it by two to give the height of each one above mean sea-level, and add this to your height of eye. The second method of finding distance off and hence a circular position line is by using a vertical sextant angle. If you have a sextant on board, it is easy in daylight to measure accurately the angle between the lantern of a lighthouse of known height, and the sea. Correct this for height of tide (unless it is MHWS, you will always have something to add) and enter the tables in the almanac for `distance off by vertical sextant angle. Read off your distance. Height of eye is irrelevant. Cut-offs and sectors of lights The changing colour of a sectored light offers a useful, ready-charted PL. So long as the sector changes positively it can be used as part of a fix. Sometimes a light is obscured by a hill or headland and the obscuring, or cut-off, line is also charted. If so, you have a useful PL as the light appears or disappears from view. This latter PL should not be treated as the gospel of accuracy, because questions of height of eye (as affected also by tide height) and even whether trees have leaves on them may modify the result. None the less, in rough weather it can prove better than a compass bearing, as it may also do if you are fighting seasickness and want an easily found PL whose perfection is of less than paramount importance. Transferred position lines Occasionally, you find yourself in need of a PL which runs in a certain approximate direction and no obvious source presents itself In these circumstances you can sometimes utilise a PL taken fairly recently by running it up to your current position. This is done by assuming a position on the old PL, then plotting a current EP worked from that assumed position. The PL is now transferred as a parallel line that cuts the new EP. It is labelled with two arrowheads at its end. Transferred position lines (TPLs) are rarely as accurate as a primary PL, but they have their uses none the less (see Running fix below).
Evaluation of fixes
Only you know how good a PL is likely to be, because you took it. If you have three winners and the result is a tight cocked hat, you can be confident of your position, particularly if the echo sounder backs it up. If your input data is not so surefooted, youll have to treat the results more carefully and plan your immediate future accordingly, always erring on the side of safety. The essence of navigational security is to take your information from more than one source whenever possible, so that you are constantly crosschecking yourself. That is why you examine your EP with a fix and, to a lesser extent, vice versa. For the same reason, it does no harm to compare a series of GPS fixes with a high-quality visual fix from time to time. If this is impossible, at least read the sounder. Dont fall into the trap of believing one source of information all the time, be it ever so good. I have seen GPS fixes checked against radar fixes as a lifeboat scooted through fogbound rocks at 18 knots. Any error would have ripped out her bottom, and those professionals were not about to trust to any single electronic guide. Even when only electronics would do, they still wanted two inputs using separate silicon chips living in separate watertight boxes. A real navigator always feels uneasy unless he is cross-checking himself, however he is doing it.
GPS works by knowing the satellites position in space. Each of them transmits coded data which include a radio signal timed to mind-numbing accuracy. This enables the receiver to calculate the distance of the transmitting satellite from its aerial, which gives it its position on the surface of a sphere centred at the satellite. The receiver chooses the three or more satellites offering the best cut of position lines (position spheres in reality) and works out its position from these. Control of GPS accuracy GPS is capable of producing fixes accurate to better than one metre, but this Precise Positioning Service (PPS) is kept by the military for themselves by encrypting the signals. The rest of us must be content with a potential accuracy of around five metres. In practice, fixes are rarely adrift by more than a boats length or two. Such discrepancies should be of no more interest to the marine navigator than his altitude, but with so high a degree of potential accuracy its easy to get carried away, so we end users must remember that a fix is only as good as the chart its plotted on. The survey data may not have allowed for such knife-edge potential, and in any case, failure to set up the receiver for the correct datum (see below) renders all such niceties a nonsense. Differential GPS This feature is described here not because it is really relevant to yacht navigation at the time of writing (2005), but in order to ensure that the full picture is understood lest the current situation change. Differential GPS (DGPS) upgrades the accuracy of the standard GPS position by comparing the GPS-fixed position of a static, ground-based receiver at any moment with its known geographic position. The ground station transmits signals to all GPS receivers in its vicinity, advising them of any error it has noted. The differential users receiver then incorporates this data into the fix that appears on its screen. Accuracy of a metre or so can then be expected.
Chart datums
The globe is not a perfect spheroid. Its surface has minor irregularities. In the days before the phenomenal accuracy of GPS, the various charting authorities were content to work within a generally agreed mean latitude and longitude grid. If one nations convention varied from another by a few metres, as it did and sometimes still does, no practical navigator was interested. The difference was largely unobservable by conventional means. Because of the precision of GPS, all this has changed. When any onboard GPS is reading our its fixes to the wrong datum for the chart in use, the plot could be in error by, at the extreme, up to several hundred metres. Datum shifts of a cable or so are commonplace. Fortunately, the majority of receivers will now read out in any one of a variety of datums. Check the title corner of your chart. If it is reasonably modern you will find a statement of datum, cg WGS84 or OSGB (1936). The GPS default setting is WGS84, favoured by the US and rapidly becoming the world standard. Some charts do not declare their datum, but give an instruction concerning how to shift satellite-derived positions instead. If this is so, set your GPS to WGS84 and do what the chart says if ultimate accuracy is required. If it isnt, as is often the case, dont waste your time with the extra plotting duties. Most electronic charts have been fine-tuned so that fixes displayed on their associated chart plotters are accurate. Whether this is done by redrawing the chart to WGS84 or by some other computer wizardry is not important to the practical user. Suffice to say that it generally works. However, I have personally seen one case where a chart somehow slipped through the net, with a potentially dangerous outcome. The message is obvious. Vigilance, and the old standby of input from more than one source. Until every chart aboard every boat is set in WGS84, the issue of datums will remain a serious one. Failure to address it can lead to serious errors in a world where so much accuracy is now assumed.
Position can be expressed either as lat/long or as a range and bearing from a known, charted object.
Using GoTo for comparing the bearing of the waypoint and the present track makes adjusting your course to take you to it a doddle; always given that the tidal stream or current is expected to remain reasonably steady. Ghost waypoints Where a leg of your passage looks like passing across a large section of chart without the need for a natural waypoint, it is worth creating a ghost waypoint purely for plotting purposes. If you make this the middle of a compass rose, plotting to or from it will be a breeze. More and more charts are doing this for you by means of so-called Plotter Reference Points. Enter the relevant ones as waypoints and they will be most useful. Plotting waypoints Waypoints are conventionally plotted as a small square around the pinpoint of the actual position. They are labelled with a name, a number or a letter. Cross-track error Your GPS receiver is aware of the direct track from one waypoint to the next, or from a defined position to a pre-entered destination. It will always be delighted to advise you as to whether or not you are off-track, which side you are off; and by how far, which is sometimes valuable to know. Many receivers will also offer you a course to steer in order to return to the line, but this must be treated with intelligent caution. If staying on track is crucial to your safety you should determine whether the recommended heading could lead into trouble from your present off-track position. There may, after all, be dangers in the way, and the GPS will not know about them. Even if the path is clear, the computer is often so desperate to get you back onto the original track that it demands an alteration so radical as to be irrelevant, particularly in a sailing boat. More often, it is better just to steer up or down by 20 degrees or so until track is re-established. The cross-track information is sometimes sufficiently unimportant for you to ignore the old track and opt instead for a fresh departure to the waypoint from where you are now. Pressing GoTo will generally restart the process. Maybe you can even miss out that waypoint and proceed towards the following one. The processor wont consider any of these options, so dont let it patronise you. Despite these cautions, cross-track error can be extremely helpful down the last mile or two onto a landfall in thick weather. Under certain circumstances it can also guide you through a series of dangers close by on either hand, but before you consider using it for this, refer to the caveats in Chapter 23. Except for the fastest power craft, cross-track error should not be considered a substitute for pre-planned course shaping over extended periods, particularly where a turn of tide is involved. Employing it for this purpose will see you steering into the stream regardless of the overall strategic situation.
You may well therefore sail considerably further through the water than is necessary. If this sounds like theoretical hot air, take a look at Chapter 20 for the reason. Man overboard function This is standard equipment in most GPS receivers. If you suffer a crew member over the side and hit the MOB button immediately, the inbuilt course computer will give a range and bearing back to the geographic location where the casualty was lost. It does this by creating a waypoint marked as MOB, then activating the GoTo software to keep you informed of what you need to know most of all where the casualty lies in relation to you. This can be a lifesaver on a dark night, but you must be aware of its limitations. The position given is a position on the sea bed. The boat and the casualty are both subject to any current or stream that is running. Their position in relation to one another is governed by the yachts movements alone, and both are drifting downstream at a constant relative rate. The geographical position given by the computer remains where it was, but any current will be carrying both the yacht and the subject away from it. A mere 2 knots of stream will shift the victim 200 metres downstream of the waypoint in three minutes. Nevertheless, it is generally well worth the 10 seconds it may take to hit that button, so long as you note the time. If you should lose touch with your casualty and are within range of Search and Rescue services (SAR), they will be able to calculate the lost persons set and drift with surprising accuracy, working from the time and the fixed MOB position. Activating the function without glancing at your watch will degrade this accuracy severely in areas of strong current, unless your computer will read out the time as well as the fix, which many do not.
destination, if for no other reason than that it shows instantly how far I have to go and an ETA. The list of features of the modern plotter is long and growing every year, so the best advice I can give is that we keep our eyes on the ball. Chartwork is not really that complicated and, with the best will in the world, manufacturers and programmers do have a tendency to install features just to show that they can. Explore your plotter thoroughly, decide which bits you want, then become its master. It will serve you well.
Marine computers
There seems little doubt that the long-term future of all but the most frugal small craft navigation lies with chart plotters. For some who grew up before GPS or even Decca, this may be a hard pill to swallow, but the fact that the mind-rattling technology became commonplace within five years of its realistic arrival on the scene tells us how much most of us really want it. At the time of writing, many medium-tech yachtsmen are using general-purpose laptop computers to run chart programs, but for larger yachts, dedicated ships computers are already becoming the norm. Amongst such basics as running major chart plotters, these compact, powerful tools can superimpose weather maps downloaded via Grib files onto passage charts. The met data can be processed by the computer to give the best course to steer for speed or comfort, while what if scenarios allow at least a modicum of intuition to be applied to this powerful flow of information. Emails and Internet go without saying, and you can even watch your favourite DVDs if you finish your handy pocket copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare. Its a far cry from me setting out across the English Channel in 1971 with an old chart, a pair of schoolboy dividers and a set of parallel rulers Id won from the dumpster. Strangely enough, I made it to Cherbourg and back. And I saw the sea on the way.
Radar
Radar is the most interactive aid to navigation. Using it properly demands far more expertise than an electronic fixing aid because its readout comes in the form of a picture which, to the uninitiated, is hard to interpret if not incomprehensible. Buying a radar set, therefore, does not solve all your navigation problems. Nonetheless, the rewards are great for those who persevere, because radar indicates visually many of those things the navigator would like to see with his own eyes but cannot by virtue of darkness, range or poor visibility. These are not only navigational features; the instrument also shows the whereabouts of shipping and small craft so as to form a primary tool for collision avoidance in fog. In the current context, however, we are interested in the instrument primarily for its navigational capabilities. Radar bearings as position lines Most radar sets have an electronic bearing line (EBL) running from the centre of the screen to its edge. This can be rotated until it touches the image of an object you have identified on the chart. The bearing can be read off from a digital display. If your radar gives a head-up picture (ie. the top of the screen is where you are headed), this bearing will be relative to your yachts heading. To convert an ERL reading on a head-up set to a compass bearing, you have merely to add the relative bearing it gives to the compass heading at the time it was taken. For example: Compass heading 105M Relative bearing 080 Compass bearing 185M If the relative bearing and the yachts heading add up to more than 360, subtract 360 from the result to come to a usable answer. Compass heading 195M Relative bearing 245 Compass bearing 440M 360 = 120M More sophisticated radar displays show north at the top, meaning that any EBL bearings will be compass bearings. Despite their obvious attractions, radar bearings do not make ideal PLs. First, they are often less than perfectly accurate because the boat yaws around her heading. Secondly, most scanners send out a beam width of say, 4, making a bearing potentially inaccurate to this extent, depending on the skill of the user. Placing the EBL in the centre of a small target will help. Headlands and other large targets viewed obliquely generally appear a half beam width closer than they are. You can often obtain a more accurate bearing by placing the EBL about half a beam width to landward of the edge of the image. Some sets can adjust their beam width to minimise this effect. If yours cannot, then a width of 4 is a fair assumption unless the handbook states otherwise. If you have no choice but to fix your position by radar bearings only, the same rules apply as to visual PLs. Look out for a good cut, use closer rather than distant objects, etc.
(left) The EBL gives a bearing relative to the yachts head in a standard head-up radar display. (right) The effect of a beam width can be compensated to some extent by placing the EBL about 2 inside a headland that is viewed obliquely.
Radar ranges as position lines As we have seen, radar bearings may be far from accurate. The capacity of radar to determine range, however, is far more refined. Indeed, it is generally good to within 1of the range scale in use. Most modern radar sets have a Variable Range Marker (VRM) which is adjusted electronically by the user to determine distance off an object on the screen. The distance from an object can be plotted on the chart as a circular PL, just like the distance off a rising light. If you can produce three such PLs you have the elements of a three-point fix, which is likely to be very accurate and whose cocked hat can be evaluated as though it were a visual fix.
The best radar fix is by plotting the distance of three charted objects. Their ranges are read off the screen by means of the VRM.
Mixed radar fixes If you need a radar fix and only a single target is recognisable on screen, you can use the ERL and the VRM on the same object to generate a fix which is geometrically identical to one worked visually from a rising or dipping light. The fix may not be the finest ever, but it should be a good deal better than its visual counterpart. Plot the distance off as one PL on the chart and the bearing as a second, crossing it at right angles. The resulting fix will be as good as the radar bearing you managed to take. If the range is extreme, this may also be misread because the radar cannot see over the horizon down to sealevel. You may be taking the range of high ground half a mile inland from what you thought was the headland.
A radar fix from a range and a bearing. Note that the racon leaves its mark on the radar screen.
The upper illustration carries the following: Ships head 335T Relative bearing by EBL 095T 430 360 True bearing 070T
The illustration above shows the fix plotted on a chart, having extracted the distance from the Variable Range Marker.
The object in view to the radar above has no such problems. It is a racon which is a radar reactive target marked as such on the chart. This one is a
light float. Its compass bearing is 075T (ships head + relative bearing), its range is 12 miles and the time 0600. This particular racon identifies itself by a flash running radially out behind the object blip on the screen. Others may show a Morse code. Had the light float been in sight, a better fix might have been obtained from a visual bearing crossed with a radar range, thus making the best of both worlds. A third PL from some other source, even if it is only the echo sounder, would have further refined the position. Radar and other fixing systems If your yacht is equipped with both radar and GPS, it is possible to navigate in poor visibility while subscribing to the essential maxim that one source of information must always be cross-checked against another. If it is absolutely vital that no mistake is made, perhaps in the vicinity of rocks or other dangers, a GPS fix can be checked against one worked up by radar from ranges, or a range and bearing. Many modern yacht radars will interface with a GPS receiver. Waypoints can thus be displayed on the radar screen, where they appear as a sort of round lollipop on a stick. This comes in handy, and can be a particular comfort when you are trying to work out which of four or five blips is the buoy you are looking for in busy waters on a foggy day. So long as the boats whole electrical system does not go down, you are now in very good shape indeed because you are using information drawn from two independent sources. The GPS data comes from outside the yacht and is beyond your control, while the radar information is generated by the yacht herself from within her own resources. Where they match up, you can be confident that all is well. If they do not, open your log book and click yourself into manual mode to find out what has gone wrong.
(left) Rowing across a current: the theory. (right) Rowing across a current: the result.
Now suppose that at the end of that minute, the current could be switched off, and you have one minute to get back on the rhumb line again, making good as much ground as you can. Obviously, in one minute you will go four times as far as the current carried you, because you are going four times as fast. Take your dividers and extend them to four times the length of ac. Put one point into point c and scribe across the rhumb line with the other. Make the mark d at the intersection. Join up cd and mark the line with a single arrowhead. At point d you are back on track. Now switch on the current and do it again. Of course, in reality the current runs all the time. The dynamics of the true situation are that the boat starts at a, steers of in a direction parallel to a on a line called course to steer, then proceeds for the designated period of time towards b never leaving the ground track, as above. Because this velocity triangle is merely a diagrammatic construction, it doesnt matter what units you use. You could choose nautical miles, but youd enjoy an equally accurate result if you used milli-cubits as Noah must have done. Even the length of your thumbnail could prove useful in the absence of a pair of dividers. It is vital that you fully understand this principle. Youll notice that cd is a function of your boat speed, it does not join point c with the destination. If it did, the diagram would be spurious, and so would your course. In a factual situation you should size up the picture, bear in mind that you must draw a vector diagram on the chart and choose units which will fit in acceptably to the scale of things. The bigger, the better, so long as the triangle does not become so large that it runs off the chart, or you run out of chart protractor. Many modern chart protractors have scales scribed along their edges and these can fit the bill excellently. Ideally, you would use minutes of latitude and do the whole job in real knots, but if the scale wont fit, there is nothing to stop you using degrees of longitude for convenience instead. If the length of the leg is such that you will execute it either in well under, or a little over, an hour, dont worry if your triangle ends up inside or beyond your destination. It does not matter. Youll reach the spot just the same, because you never leave the ground track in a simple cross-tide vector. Obviously, you extract your tide set and drift information from one of the sources mentioned in Chapter 15. Dont forget that tide booked as 1.3 knots 250 3 hours before HW Dublin means that from 3 hours before until 2 hours before HW, you get 1.3 knots at 250. To get the figure for between 2
and 1 hours before HW you need to look up 2 hours before HW. If your run is going to straddle a change, make a pro-rata adjustment, interpolating in your head if you are not overfussy about the result. If you really care, plot hour of each tide, or whatever you predict the relevant proportions to be The same principles apply to legs where you expect to run two hours tide, or more. In these cases, plot all the tide vectors at the beginning (point a in the illustration), then join point c (the end of the compound tide vector) with your track by setting your dividers to the distance you expect to run in however many hours tide you have plotted. Again, you must resist the temptation to join the end of the tide vector to your destination, especially when your dividers are hovering close to it.
Course to steer at the turn of the tide. If you lay off for both tide hours individually so as to stay on the rhumb line, you will have to sail further than if you lay off both together at the beginning. This is because one hours tide more or less cancels the other, so to counteract them is vain.
This example should make clear the folly of using the cross-track error function of a GPS receiver to compensate for set and drift without considering all the implications. In a simple 1-hour situation, the technique can be most useful, particularly when horning in on a single-point destination in thick weather, but on a longer passage in a tide due to change it is emphatically not the best thing to do.
Look up the tidal stream information for all of your 11 hours. Add up the north-going and the south-going streams, take the lesser value from the greater, and you have what is in effect a net tide vector. Plot this at your departure point, draw in your track, open the dividers to 60 miles (or whatever scale you are using) and complete the triangle. You may drift 15 miles to one side of your track by the time you are half-way there, but the next 5 hours will see you sliding back towards Dublin as surely as you can say, A pint of Guinness, please.
Leeway
Youll notice that, after initially noting its importance, we havent yet mentioned leeway in this discussion. The reason is that because it is applied to the course to steer, it is dealt with as a final adjustment. If you have understood its place in the estimated position youll realise how to deal with it for a course to steer. Depending on her point of sailing, your boat is going to be driven downwind by her leeway at anything from 2 or 3 to as much as 20 in heavy weather. Once you have estimated how much your leeway will be, you must steer upwind by an equivalent number of degrees to counteract it. On the chart you can arrange this by laying your plotter along the course to steer and rotating it 10 (or whatever the leeway angle may be) to windward. Do not plot this line. If you do, clarity will be compromised., but I would suggest that you log it as the course you are steering, after making a note in the log book to remind you about what you have done. Some log books contain separate columns for course required, leeway and course steered. If you find this helpful, go for it, but dont feel you must if you find the extra columns daunting. It is enough to log what you are really steering. Remember that when you come to plot an EP youll be applying leeway to the course actually steered, so that is the one that counts. The question of when to plot a cross-tide vector and when to eyeball it causes considerable misunderstanding among inexperienced sailors. Like most things, the best answer is to eyeball it if you can. In a cross-current, this means being able to identify some sort of transit, perhaps a natural one, either dead astern or ahead, behind your destination. This is often not possible, however, so my recommendation is to practise plotting vectors until it is second nature. Then, when you feel you need a course to steer which will allow for the tide, the job will only take a few seconds. If it absorbs 5 minutes, you are being a bad skipper. What is more, if you know its going to take that long youll be less inclined to do it when you need to. The answer is to follow your common sense but to be a master of the mechanics of plotting.
Wind shifts
When you are expecting a wind shift, you ought to decide how it would affect you were you to remain on the rhumb line to your destination. If you are on a tight reach and the shift will free you, well and good, but if it looks like being a header, steer as high as you can before it arrives. Work yourself well to windward of the rhumb line, then when the breeze heads you, follow it round close-hauled until it settles down (below). You shouldnt risk easing sheets unless you are entirely confident of laying your destination. The instinctive sailor always keeps his destination under his lee as long as the wind remains forward of the beam. When in doubt, work up to windward.
A similar situation occurs when you expect a shift which will put you on a dead run. No one wants a run, so try to adjust your position so that when the wind changes direction you find yourself on a broad reach instead.
If you still have a considerable distance to make up, the worst mistake is to stay on the losing tack all the way to the lay line in the hope that you will lay your destination in one after you have gone about. If you are lifted towards the end of the losing tack, the long favoured tack you have worked for will disappear. Were you to be headed near the end of the bad tack, of course you could tack on the shift and lay home in one with a complacent smirk, but since we are talking about haphazard wind shifts, a 50% chance of success isnt good enough when there is a more certain alternative. If the wind is blowing directly from your destination, the safest way to organise a long beat is to tack up a cone. You should draw in your rhumb line on the chart, then either sketch or imagine two lines spreading out at a 5 angle on either side. When you have sailed as far from the rhumb line as the outer edge of your cone, you should tack, recross the rhumb line and so on, given that there is no wind shift. If the wind lucks or veers, take a look at things from where you are and see if there is now a making tack. With the wind on the nose, any shift is beneficial on one tack or the other, so long as you are near the rhumb line. If you are out on a limb, the shift may be a winner or it may be a disaster. The cone keeps you well placed to take advantage of whatever happens.
Arrogance has ignored the expected shift and allowed herself to be caught on the wrong side of the rhumb line. For her sins, she is now dead to leeward with a long beat ahead, watching Prudence fetch straight in. Both had sailed exactly the same distance from their starting-point when the wind shifted.
Beating in a cross-current
If there is a current running when you are beating towards an objective, the favoured tack may not be obvious. Assuming the wind is blowing straight down the rhumb line and the current is running across it, the tack that puts the current on your lee side is the winner. On that tack, the current is lifting you to windward as well as keeping you closer to the rhumb line, so you not only make good more ground, you are in a better position to benefit from any unexpected wind shifts.
Beating in a cross-tide
For these purposes, a tidal stream is distinguished from a current by the fact that it changes its strength and direction every so often. The usual diurnal tide gives us six hours stream each way. If you are going to complete your beat before the turn of the tide, the stream may be treated as if it were a current as described above. If the tide is going to turn one or more times during the passage, you can take advantage of a hidden bonus if you arrange your tacks to keep the cross-tide on the lee bow. Weve just seen how a weather-going stream will keep you near the rhumb line. If you tack as the tide turns, youll keep as close to it as possible all the time, but that isnt the end of the benefits. When you have the tide on your lee bow, you are moving in an apparent wind which unsuspected by the uninitiated is lifting you by several degrees and enabling you to point even closer to your destination (below).
Heres how it works: if you stopped the boat, took down her sails and were able to switch off the wind, you would drift with the tide at right angles to the rhumb line. As you were carried through the still air you would feel an apparent breeze coming from the opposite direction at the same speed as the tide, say 3 knots. This is called the tide wind. Now turn the wind on again and get under way. The breeze across your deck can be thought of as a mixture of two components. There is the apparent sailing wind from which the average modern cruiser should be pointing 30 or so, and there is the 3 knot tide wind. Because the stream is on your lee bow, this is coming from your weather quarter, so it is exerting a freeing influence on the totality of the apparent wind in which you are sailing. If the apparent wind is 13.5 knots and 3 knots of that is tide wind, the difference it is causing in the overall direction will be considerable. No change in apparent wind direction can alter your boats pointing ability but, by lee bowing the tide, you have manipulated the breeze itself so that you are making good more ground towards your goal. Dont ignore the tide, even if it is running at only 1 knot. Every little helps on a long beat. Famous helmsmen win trophies by using these methods, but there is nothing new about them at all. Successful clipper captains were employing them in the 1850s. Fishermen homeward bound with their catch tacked on every heading wind shifts and the oyster dredger crossing the bay to his working ground did everything he could to work the tide under his lee bow. The techniques pay off for every ship that sails the sea. They have been developed to such a degree of sophistication because, in the end, none of us likes a beat to be any longer than is absolutely necessary.
Tacking downwind
For many people, running dead downwind in a seaway represents one of lifes more extreme unpleasantnesses. Poling out the number 1 as you cream along behind your local island on a summers evening might be fine, but doing the same thing at sea is worlds away, not only because of the physical difficulty of dancing around the foredeck with the pole, but also because a boat on a run is both slow and uncomfortable. She rolls without the steadying effect of the heeling force from the rig; she is slow because, if the breeze is less than force 4, her own progress will reduce the apparent wind to such a degree that it no longer has any real strength to drive her. Running may be the nadir for sailors, but a broad reach is fast, smooth and safe. So why does the wind always blow from right aft? Sods Law, thats why. Inconvenience is a fact of the sailors life, but there is no need to be downhearted. If you cant stand running, why not steer clear of it like the pestilence it is. Dont head directly downwind, however tempting it may seem. Bring the boat up as far as it takes to get her sailing sweetly, then reach away until you have rattled off half your distance. Now gybe on to the opposite tack and reach off the other half. In light or moderate winds youll probably pick up a knot of extra speed, so, even discounting the gain in comfort, youll be hardly any worse off in passage time. Here is a typical example: A 60 mile passage on a run at 5 knots = 12 hours. Come up to the wind by 30. Your distance is now about 70 miles. If your speed increases by 1 knot, there will be no extension of passage time. If you find 30 is not enough to make the reach really positive, you could come up to 40, adding 18 miles to the total distance. You would now be out for 13 hours instead of 12, but what a sail youd have! Youre not racing, so unless there is a critical tide-gate to catch, why not enjoy the trip?
VMG
Most GPS receivers offer the user a VMG calculation facility as part of the software package. VMG stands for Velocity Made Good towards a given objective. In this case, the objective will be the next waypoint. If you activate the waypoint, the relevant electronic page will tell you how fast you are actually progressing towards it, as well as your less relevant current speed over the ground. When you are in doubt as to which tack is favoured, note the reading, then tack. If the VMG improves, stay on the new board. If it drops, tack back again. VMG is also useful when reaching in a cross-tide. If this has a favourable component, your speed over the ground may appear a good deal better than your actual VMG, so check it out if you want to calculate an estimated time of arrival (ETA).
Pilot books
A good yachtsmans pilot is worth its weight in marine-grade stainless steel, while for solid detail of coastal and offshore features the Admiralty Pilots offer the worlds finest value. Check them not only for information on harbours at the beginning and end of the passage, but also for the passage notes they may contain.
Alternative destinations
The essence of cruising is flexibility. Most of us arent out there to wear the hair shirt, so any destination becomes more desirable if it offers workable alternatives on either side of it. If there is doubt about whether you will reach it before a strong tide turns foul, a second choice, either at a shorter distance or a few miles to leeward, could turn a demoralising six hours spent sailing on the spot into a satisfactory arrival and a good nights rest. If it saves you a five-mile slug close-hauled in a strengthening foul tide after failing to lay your original choice of port in one, youll be doubly delighted. Conversely, when things are going better than you dared to hope, with the yacht rollicking along in the sunshine, you may not want to stop at your official destination. A likely haven 10 miles further on would offer the opportunity to extract full value from this rarest of days. When your track runs in the vicinity of the coast, check for any ports of refuge if there is the slightest doubt about the weather. This does not have to be one of your viable alternatives, but you must ensure not only that it will offer berthing facilities, but that it can be entered safely with the wind in the direction you fear it may take. If you are in any doubt about this, consult your pilot book.
Waypoints
If you are using GPS waypoints, now is the time to decide where they will be. When youve noted each one and punched them into the machine, plot them into the chart a second time from the co-ordinates in the GPS in order to double-check them. Carelessly entered waypoints are a main source of GPS-induced shipwreck. Only a thorough inspection of the chart for an individual passage can determine where waypoints are going to be useful, but it sometimes pays to have one at your point of departure from the pilotage mode. You will certainly require a second at your destination. Others may be at headlands or offshore shoals along the general route. Although waypoints are supposed to be positions of real navigational significance, it can be a kindness if you site a waypoint strategically to give the crew a psychological boost. Its reassuring on a long, tedious trip if the skipper can say, Things might look grisly, folks, but well be at my Point Misery in another half hour. Thats two thirds of the distance, so itll be all downhill from there.
Waypoint lists
Many natural corners are defined by a buoy, a beacon or a light structure with their lat/long positions given in the almanacs, cruising guides or published waypoint lists so that you can enter them directly. This can be valuable where pinpoint accuracy is desired, as it would be if you were using a waypoint in a pilotage plan too tight to plot with pencil and dividers, or to pick out a buoy from other blips on your interfaced radar screen. Such precision is often irrelevant, however. In circumstances other than those above, I rarely take up the offer of listed mid-passage waypoints because it suits me to make my turns some distance from the charted spot. Steering directly towards an abstract position which serves your particular purposes on the day is simple. Trying to end up some chosen distance adrift from a waypoint pre-determined by somebody else can be more tricky. Even an arrival waypoint is sometimes more effective if it is a mile up-tide of the breakwater. You can always adjust matters later when you know youre going to make it. A further reason for plotting your own waypoint positions is that there is always the off-chance the book will get it wrong. While almanac compilers are among the most painstaking people on the planet, I know as the author of a successful pilot book that everyone can occasionally make an error. A notorious error printed in a favourite almanac for the Irish Sea one year could well have led to some classic navigational blunders. You therefore owe it to yourself to double-check. Besides, taking this trouble helps to develop your lat/long plotting skills.
Sailplans (routes)
All GPS receivers feature a system whereby the navigator can string a series of way-points together, forming a planned route, or sailplan. As the yacht travels past one waypoint, the computer automatically gives a course and distance to the next, and so on until the destination is reached. A sailplan can be a real winner when a large number of course alterations follow within a comparatively short time. A classic example is through the rocks of the Chenal du Four on the northwest corner of France. Tides are rampant in this twelve-mile passage with its half-dozen minor but vital course alterations, and sudden fog is common. Given the usual 5 knots of current and a typical 6-knot boat speed, the buoys come up very quickly indeed, so a carefully organised route plan is a source of substantial stress-relief, particularly if backed up in practice by radar. Even if you use a chart plotter with electronic charts, it is better to enter your waypoints at the planning stage in harbour than to click them in at sea where you may be distracted. Choose them carefully and be sure they relate safely to each other.
Weather
Whether you are thinking of a two-week cruise plan or a six-hour passage, the secret of making the most of the weather is to be thoroughly informed, but not too rigid in your planning. One of the most genuinely recreational things about going to sea is the confrontation with an elemental force which nothing that can be done or said will ever alter. If youve planned a ten-day cruise with a family crew on a stretch of coast 150 miles distant which turns out on the day to lie full in the eye of an established wind, youll either have to forget it, or square up for a 48-hour dead beat, or worse. A modern yacht will generally get you there, but the price in terms of discomfort may be higher than you care to pay. It may be a different matter if you and your mates are out for a rugby club cruise. This can be a lot of fun but isnt everyones cup of tea. If you arent engaged in yacht delivery, it is usually wiser to have various cruise plans up your sleeve, and to study the newspaper weather maps and the radio forecasts a week or more before sailing day to avoid ending up with a ferry ride home. In the shorter term, make sure that you have noted any impending changes in wind strength and direction, and have paid special attention to any likely alterations in visibility. Fog on passage doesnt have to be the end of the world, so long as you have paid due thought to it and planned accordingly. The rules of thumb for fog navigation with and without electronic assistance will be found in Chapter 26.
Tidal streams
After distance, this is the most important item in a passage plan. It is more beneficial to beat with a fair tide than to reach against a foul one, particularly in areas of abnormal tidal activity, such as tidal gates (Chapter 15). There are tidal gates on both sides of the Atlantic which will reduce the progress of a vessel making less than 7 knots to a crawl, while a yacht beating to windward will make no ground at all. It is therefore vital to hit gates when they are open. It can be useful to scribe light circles one hour in radius centred on the gate, which cut the track drawn on the chart and show the latest times the yacht can be at these points if the gate is to be reached before it closes. These marks are of great interest in light going, because it is then that the latest time at which you can start the engine if youre going to slip through the gate becomes critical. If you cant bring yourself to consider motoring on passage at any price, youll have to look out for suitable bays in which to kedge to await the next fair tide. Personally I can never understand this point of view from those who have an auxiliary engine. Ive done my time without one, and now that I have a diesel Im all for extracting any benefit I can from that drogue disguised as a propeller that my boat must drag kicking and screaming through every mile she sails. Tidal stream atlases, or the relevant section in the almanac, should have ships time pencilled in on each relevant page so as to minimise time spent below. Periods at the chart table can also be axed if High Water at the standard port concerned is noted alongside the tidal diamond key on the passage chart. If the passage runs across the tide, you will help yourself if you work up in advance the sum of the probable tidal effect in each direction for the initially assumed duration of the passage. Although this information may no longer be relevant by the time you make landfall, it will give you some basic data from which to shape a course after you have been able to ascertain your boat speed in practice.
Off-lying dangers
It is well worth familiarising yourself with these before the passage begins, but there is no need to go to the extreme of writing down where they are. After all, youll see them on the chart as they approach, but if youve spent some time considering their implications, youll have been able to deal with items such as clearing bearings well in advance. This may save an unseemly scrabble round the chart table later on, when it is heeled over twenty degrees or more. Traffic separation zones are the passage planners nightmare. We all know the rules, and swingeing fines await any delinquent caught disobeying them. Avoid heavy shipping concentrations altogether if you have the choice.
Tidal heights
Some harbours in northern Europe are only approachable at certain states of the tide. If your destination is one of these, calculate the times when this tidal window will be open early on in the planning procedure, so that you can work back from there. As in the case of gates for tidal stream, one or two concentric latest time rings on the passage chart often prove helpful. Tidal heights above areas of shoal water may also be critical. If a tidal curve is available for the area concerned, till it in as part of the passage plan. It can then be used for reference, enabling you to work out the height of tide in a few seconds whenever you may require
Daylight
The benefits of a dawn landfall are considerable. You can fix your position without ambiguity on the shore lights before the sun comes up. Then you have the whole day in which to work your way into harbour without the additional stress brought on by darkness. You also benefit from being under no end-ofday pressure to find the authorities before nightfall. If you have to enter or leave a harbour during the night hours, moonlight is a tremendous help, even if the moon herself is behind the clouds. The approximate time of moonrise and moonset can be found in the almanac. Dont worry if the detailed corrections leave you cold. In most cases, a general idea is all youll need.
Fuel
Nothing is more frustrating than six hours spent going backwards past a tidal gate because the wind has dropped and you havent enough fuel to motor. This dismal consummation always happens at 0300, leaving the watch on deck plenty of time to consider the implications of your omission. Most modern yachts have enough fuel capacity for a full 24 hours running, but you should make yourself aware of what your range is at the extreme, with a sizeable margin for safety. If motoring isnt too traumatic on your boat, a calm spell sometimes gives you the chance to put a painless 100 miles to windward into the bag. It would be a shame to miss the opportunity because youd decided not to bother filling up.
Courses to steer
These should only be planned approximately, if indeed you consider the trouble worth taking at all. Whatever you pre-compute will probably be wrong if there is any tide or current, unless you are in a motor boat. If you have worked up a rough heading, however, you can use that, see what speed you make, then determine a proper course to steer using tidal data you have already prepared.
Pilotage plan
A plan for entering a strange harbour is essential if the pilotage promises to be of any complexity. There is often time to produce this on passage, but if you are prone to seasickness it is much better done before you set off. The question of whether or not you need a written pilotage plan, and what form it should take, seems still to be a personal one. It depends, amongst other things, upon how pictorial a memory you have. The matter is discussed in more detail in Chapter 23.
23. Pilotage
No matter what the weather conditions, as soon as you enter a strange harbour or become involved with any close-in work around narrow channels, detailed chart-table navigation becomes impractical and GPS at least partially inappropriate. As the yacht threads her way through navigable gaps that are measured in metres rather than miles, the time involved in taking fixes and plotting carefully constructed courses to steer renders such techniques unusable. Even if you tried to make time by detailed planning, you would be unwise to trust a course based upon published tidal stream prediction when an error measured in boats lengths could spell disaster. Theoretically, one could be forgiven for imagining that a series of shrewdly plotted waypoints arranged as a route might work perfectly so long as Selective Availability remains removed from civilian GPS. Unfortunately, the juxtaposition of concepts as you move from eyeball to screen and back again can cause such a culture shock that, in tight situations, practical steering errors occur at vital corners. Furthermore, the plotting accuracy required to place a waypoint exactly on a gap in the rocks three boats lengths across on a paper chart may well prove beyond the limits of your pencil sharpener. Finally, if the GPS readout happens to be set to the wrong datum for the chart, the whole exercise is reduced to a dangerous faree. As we shall see, GPS can have its uses in pilotage, but it does not supply an easy overall answer. You must therefore first look for signposts which may readily be observed visually in preference to textbook data or electronics. The arts which result are known as pilotage. The essence of successful pilotage is to extract that information from chart and pilot book which will enable you to work through the dangers on a series of positively defined straight lines. Each line takes you past one problem or another, until you either arrive at your destination, or sail safely out into wider waters. So long as you are on a safe line, or tracking through a defined zone which you know is clear of danger and which leads you to the next line, you do not usually require to know how far along it you are. Thus, in pilotage, your position is often defined only in the dimension of your desired track. The crossreference that would constitute a fix is generally absent, except at certain important times. Coming to terms with this is vital to competent pilotage. An examiner can always tell a tyro because of the way he is constantly trying to fix his position, even when to do so is not only unnecessary and a waste of time, it is also nigh on impossible. Because of the presence of cross-currents in much pilotage, it is rarely sufficient simply to steer so that the yachts head points towards the next object. Fortunately, there are a number of wrinkles for making sure that the boat remains on the desired line without having to resort to fixing.
Safe track
Two types of line are essential to the business of pilotage: the safe track, which is the straight line leading through a particular set of dangers; and the clearing line, defining the edge of a danger area. Keep on the right side of a clearing line and you are safe; venture across it, and you are stranded. The best way to establish the whereabouts of either type of line is with a transit. As we have seen in Chapter 18, the line joining two known objects, projected seaward, is the most reliable position line of all. When used to mark off a safe track you can work along it with no difficulty, and you can see straight away if you depart from it by as much as a cockpits width. A transit works equally well if you are steering directly towards or directly away from it and it makes a fine leading line for entering or leaving a harbour. For this reason, many authorities set up transits using posts and lights in crucial places. These are charted and noted in all relevant pilot books. In addition to indicating safe tracks, transits also make fine clearing lines. If the two markers remain open on the correct side, all is well; if they close, you are on the clearing line; if they open on the wrong side, instant action will be required if you are to continue having a happy day.
We have looked at many forms of transit in Chapter 18, but in pilotage you can be especially creative. If no official transit lends itself to your needs, inspect the chart carefully for two recognisable objects which, when in line, will give you the safe passage or the clearance you are seeking. It will surprise you how frequently something will show up. It could be the end of a pier and a conspicuous hotel, two islands with their edges just closed, the right-hand side of a building on with a light structure, etc. The best method of finding them is to lay your plotter on the desired track on the chart, then see what you can find along its edge. You may have to shunt it around a little, but there is frequently something that will serve. If you cannot make up a transit to lead you from one mark (a buoy, perhaps, or a post) to the next, your second line of defence is to use a compass bearing. This is an indifferent substitute for a charted transit, but you can still make hill use of natural transits to make the best of the situation. Immediately after rounding the first mark, steer the boat directly for the second. If you cannot instantly identify it, ask all hands to look for it dead ahead. As soon as you have it, glance astern at the first mark to ensure you have not already been set off the safe track. Now line up your goal with anything immediately behind it which is not going to move. A fisherman mending his nets will do so long as he doesnt walk off. Keep the buoy and the fisherman in transit and you can only be on the direct line from the first buoy to the second, It you cannot find two objects to line up, you will have to use your hand-bearing compass, which is a pilots last resort. When you are sailing away from a known object down a safe track defined by a compass bearing, you can keep on track by using a back bearing. Watch the object over the compass as its distance increases, and make sure that its bearing remains constant. The preferred technique for achieving this end is to hold the compass at the desired bearing and see if the object moves to the left or right. When the boat wanders from her track it is easy to see which side you have slipped if you are using the compass like this. If you sight the actual bearing of the object and try to work out which way you have drifted by doing sums in your head, you can easily come unstuck. Never forget that the best compass you have is the ships steering compass. If you are sailing towards a specified object on a safe track or if an object whose bearing defines a clearing line is almost ahead you have only to read the compass when the boats head is exactly on the object to determine its precise bearing, given, of course, that you correct for any deviation. If the object lies more than a few degrees off the bow, you can always twitch your heading every so often to check its bearing on the steering compass. This technique can save considerable trouble trying to use a handbearing compass when there is no need. If an object defines a safe track and you are steering directly towards it, the trick for remaining in line is the same as that used for a back bearing with the hand-bearing compass. Keep your heading constantly on the safe bearing. If the object drifts away to one side, it should be easy to decide which way to correct so as to set you back on track. Make a positive jink, then put your ships head back on the safe bearing. Note the relationship of the object to your heading, and retry if necessary until you get it right. There will be occasions when your only useful source of input is the echo sounder. Dont despise this. Weve already looked at how it can supply a position line of a sort, and there are many occasions when you are rounding a shoal which is not steep-to when a depth is all you need and indeed, all you have to ensure safe passage. Sometimes a particular track will remain safe until you have run to a given point at which you must alter course. In these situations, always look for an
unambiguous visual definition to tell you when you have arrived. This could be a transit closing abeam of you, or an object coming on to a certain bearing. It might be a depth on the echo sounder, or less accurately, a single object coming directly abeam. The time when something is exactly abeam can best be judged by looking down the mainsheet traveller. It is as good as a primitive gunsight.
Straight line pilotage. The pilot only knows his exact whereabouts when one of his straight lines intersects with another at a point of course change.
If no visual cut-off point presents itself, see if you can work in an easy-to-use GPS position line. GPS reads out in Latitude and Longitude, both of which are no more than lines of position. Sometimes you can define the point to leave a safe line as the moment you pass a certain meridian or parallel. A typical instruction would be: Stay on the transit of Brown Cow Rock and Farmer Giles gable end until the latitude racks up to 50 43.15N. So long as the safe track is making a reasonable cut with the chart grid (see Chapter 18, Position Fixing) this technique is convenient and accurate, but you must check your GPS datum. Often, a safe track is broad and straight, but surrounded by ghastly nasties below the surface of the water. Try to think of such a track as a safe corridor. Define both walls of the corridor with clearing lines of some sort, keep inside them, and you have nothing to fear. Where no clearing lines can be found, and you can be absolutely certain of the position of a suitable single waypoint plotted smack in the centre of one end of the corridor, you might in extreme circumstances venture into the corridor on the safest track to the waypoint. Now work towards or away from it (straight down the middle) using cross-track error to fill in the shortfall. This means committing to a course of action with your colours nailed to a single source of information which cannot be crosschecked, so you have chosen to break the first law of navigation. If the GPS should fail halfway along the line, you may have little choice beyond anchoring or trusting in the Lord to find you a safe route out. In larger-scale pilotage, GPS can also supply a clearing line where no visual object can be discerned. If a distant beacon is too small to see, even with binoculars, plot it as a waypoint and note its changing bearing just as you would a visual compass bearing. If no beacon exists, plot an abstract waypoint at the most suitable place from which to run a safe bearing. Three general caveats apply to pilotage with GPS. Make sure you have an instant contingency plan for electronic failure. Triple-check everything you pre-plot and double-check your datums, because this close to danger these become critical. Determine whether your GPS is reading out in Magnetic or True degrees, because most have the facility to deliver either and the difference can spell disaster.
Forward planning
Because your affairs may develop rapidly when you are engaged in this type of work, it is helpful to prepare a plan in advance. Your pilot book will sometimes do this for you, but more usually you must deal with the question yourself. The form taken by these plans is highly individual, but they should contain such information as courses, bearings and approximate distances from one mark to the next. It may also be useful to know how much tide is standing above chart datum at any given moment, so fill out your tidal curve and keep that handy as well. The information will stand you in good stead, particularly if you have to modify your plan during its execution, so that you end up somewhere you did not intend to go. If you have a well-thought-out plan at hand when the action starts, you are under far less pressure to dive below and start fumbling around with the plotter. Ideally, you should ask someone else to steer while you are piloting. Your sole task is then to con the vessel using your plan and the chart. This way it is easy for you to call the shots on the sailing of the boat, as well as keeping her off the bricks and the putty. Never forget that you have much less control over your boats direction of travel relative to the seabed with a following tide than you have with a foul tide. When the current is strong and foul, small course alterations bring you a big dividend in terms of sideways tracking. At night particularly, you must be doubly vigilant about these effects. Take your time, and never hesitate to stop altogether if you become disorientated. Once you are anchored, or hove to, or simply not going anywhere any more, you can shed the stress, then plot an accurate fix before collecting your thoughts for a fresh start.
Remarks: Beating down to the Needles. Full main and Genoa. Nice morning. Time: Course: Barom: 0700 184M 1017.5 Log: Wind: Engine: 0.0 W4 Off
Remarks: Bridge Buoy at hand. Beam reach (true); one more yacht out here going our way; sea moderate; kettle on. Log to zero. Time: Course: Barom: 0800 184M 1016 Log: Wind: Engine: 6.3 W4/5 Off
Remarks: Fix on chart. Sea a bit steep. Hanging onto full sail for now. A position of some sort every hour is sound policy, and since I can see the land clearly I should take a fix. In any case, right now its easier to do that than to work up an EP. Ill cross reference it against my course steered and distance run, but I wont physically plot the EP. So long as it all stacks up, Im happy. At 0920 the land is fading from view and I take a departure fix which gives me my last certain position before I sight France. After this, its all EPs. Time: Course: Barom: 0920 184M 1016 Log: Wind: Engine: 14.9 W4 Off
Remarks: Departure fix. Vis about 15M. EP and fix on chart. Yacht falling astern! Notice that I have plotted my EP this time. Thats to make sure the tide is behaving as expected. If it hadnt been I could have modified my course to steer. It was, so I havent. It also gives me a confirmation of this important fix. Things now proceed systematically. I go off watch, leaving instructions for the hands to record the log each hour and to call me as we approach the shipping lanes. They can manage without me until then and I need to stay fresh, so its down to the bunk for me with my favourite book. If I dont do this, Ill just sit up there with things going round and round in my head. Far better to take a break. Time: Course: 1100 Log: 180M Wind: 24.0 WNW4
Barom: 1015 Engine: Off Remarks: EP on chart. Alter course. This course alteration is for the shipping lanes. The wind has veered a touch, freeing us, and I have no compunction about giving away a bit of ground to windward. I make up the plot now Im awake, and place a fresh EP on the chart. Time: Course: Barom: 1405 200M 1014 Log: Wind: Engine: 42.2 WSW5 Off
Remarks: EP on chart. Out of shipping lanes, but so far east that weve altered well to the west, just to make sure. This next EP shows that my keenness to comply with the traffic regulations has left me well to leeward and the wind has backed unkindly. Things arent looking so good and were really going to need that westerly set. Heres the next log entry: Time: Course: Barom: Remarks: 1450 210M 1013.5 Log: Wind: Engine: 47.0 WSW5 On
Fix on what can only be Pte de Barfleur and what I take to be C. Levi. EP and depth confirm, but suggest were a mile or so to leeward of the fix. Motorsailing now. Cone hoisted.
Note how keeping the plot going has enabled me to make the right decision about motorsailing and has helped me identify my landfall with confidence. We went so far east looking for the first of the west-going tide that well end up beating at this rate.
52.5 WSW5 On
Remarks: Cherbourg Fort de lEst in sight. Altering course to bring it into transit with its background. Rolled in Genoa. But fortune is kind and my landfall fix indicates that Ive found the tide earlier than I expect. Deteriorating sea conditions as the stream begins to set against the tide have already suggested that. Ive logged my positions and even if the fog came in now, Id stand a good chance. Time: Course: Barom: 1735 P 1011 Log: Wind: Engine: 60.4 SW5 On
Remarks: Fort de lEst abeam. Pilotage plan activated. Good thing we motorsailed. A safe arrival. Note how the plot was maintained throughout.
Weather: W4/5 (1016.5) Engine: Off Remarks: Sea a bit steep. Hanging onto full sail for now. Note that I now have a column for position. Previously, I plotted this on the chart, because it was inevitably somewhat imprecise for numerical definition to the second decimal point. Now, however, I know where I am and it makes sense to log the position as well as plotting it. This not only allows a backcheck, it also means that unskilled crew members can jot down a lat/long on the hour if the navigator is off watch. Working back from these positions he can then see exactly where hes been, and if the GPS fails, he knows where he was at the last reasonable moment before the lights went out. Having an accurate fix to compare with my projected EP waypoint when I come out of the shipping lanes helps me quantify how far east Im being set. I can therefore alter course with more confidence. The tide has yet to turn, however, so I will continue to shape a course rather than follow a GPS bearing to my destination waypoint. Nearing the destination Round about the time I make landfall, Ill begin using GPS to compare my COG (course over ground) with the bearing of Fort de LEst. Ill also be logging my position as Fort de lEst 14.9M, 211T in preference to my mid-Channel lat/long. Knowing that the tide will strengthen, Ill initially shape for a point up-tide of the waypoints bearing, but as I come within an hour or so of the fort, Ill begin steering to have the two figures coincide. If it were foggy, Id refine the arrival waypoint to be in a very safe place after double-checking datum one more time. Then Id reactivate the GoTo function and follow the XTE screen right down the middle for the run-in. If vis is good, as it is on this passage, Ill forget the GPS once Im absolutely certain about what I am seeing. Ill switch into eyeball mode a few miles out and use natural transits to home in as before.
Food
The most important items for crew morale are food and drink. Whatever horrors are coming to pass, if the team know that they will be fed and watered appetisingly and on time, you are at least half-way to a happy ship and a happy ship is usually an efficient ship. The galley should be set up so as to make this requirement realistic to fulfil. On passages of more than 12 hours, this becomes vital, but even with poor cooking arrangements, there are certain precautions which can be taken to make the cooks life (if cook there be) more tolerable: For a short, daytime passage that promises to be rough, make up some solid sandwiches before you slip your mooring. Always cook a serious stew, chilli, curry, or whatever suits your tastes, before setting out on an overnight passage. Ideally, this should be left on the stove clamped up in the pressure cooker. Then a hot meal is guaranteed, even if the boat is standing on her ends and volunteers for the galley are 100% absent. Keep the tea and coffee coming, and dont go mad washing up the mugs in bad weather. Each person should have their own, clearly labelled, so that you only need commit them to the suds if you are feeling virtuous and conditions make the sink an attractive proposition. Small boats crews are well served by the provision of thermos flasks containing drinks or hot soup. Keep plenty of instant food handy. Biscuits, cookies, chocolate, pies and the like may be officially junk, but they wont kill anybody in the short term, and they do wonders for keeping up a crews spirits.
Sleep
Keep everyone properly rested. This may not involve a watch system on a short trip, but you should take active notice of your crews condition, none the less. It is often difficult to persuade people to go below, but if they start to look tired, that is where they should be, lying down in their bunks (see below for seasickness). On passages of over 12 hours, and in any case overnight, you must devise a watch system. I refuse to be drawn into suggesting what form this ought to take. There are almost as many arrangements as there are yachts. All I would say is, keep it simple, and stick to it. You dont want any martyrs, and that includes yourself. There are two reasons for this: first, the person who does more than his fair share will become tired. Secondly, anyone helped out with his watch will feel obligated to his benefactor, which is precisely the sort of inequality that leads to tension and, ultimately, trouble. Exceptionally, a key individual such as the skipper or the cook can be awarded an extra hour or two in the sack if they expect to be up for a long or inconvenient period later on, possibly for strategic reasons. Dont expect to sleep like a baby on your first night out. Most peoples experience is that they are too excited or unsettled to sleep properly. Its the second and third nights, as tiredness begins to take hold, that one begins to resemble a felled tree. Even if you dont feel tired, you should make a point of getting your head down. You dont even need to undress if it doesnt seem appropriate. The respite from staring at the horizon is worth it in itself.
Warmth
Nowadays, keeping your crew warm and dry is less of a problem than was once the case. I remember many years ago crossing the English Channel at Easter with no oilskins, simply because I couldnt afford them. To own a yacht as well as a sailing suit seemed a height of hedonism to which only the prodigiously wealthy could aspire. Modern gear, while not cheap, is remarkably effective and most sailors seem at least tolerably well equipped in these more prosperous times. Watch out for hypothermia, particularly in those who fancy that a spell below will bring them down with seasickness. The result of this irrational fear is that folks sit in the corner of the cockpit, sometimes with the sea literally washing over them, rather than face a period in the warm. As soon as they begin to go quiet and lose interest, you should do something about them, otherwise exposure will take its toll. How you persuade different people to do what is surely best for them is entirely individual. The job may tax your interpersonal skills to the utmost, but act you must, and sooner rather than later.
Space
Amongst other things, modern yachts are notable for the large number of berths they supply within comparatively short overall lengths. However, filling all these for extended passage making is not always a good idea. Stuffing a vessel full of personnel as a means of defraying the expense of a bare boat charter might have its financial appeal, but if human beings are to enjoy a degree of contentment, they need a little space they can call their own, especially when very young or very mature. Even if it is only a bunk which remains private, the difference to an individuals morale after a few days can be quite noticeable.
Seasickness
There is no easy answer to the ancient problem of motion seasickness. On a short trip, sufferers or potential sufferers will undoubtedly fare better on deck than down below, but as time passes, fatigue and exposure become an issue and people simply must take a watch below. The difficult period then comes between entering the companionway and being flat on ones back. Once in the latter state, nausea rarely wins the day, so the trick is to waste as little time as possible getting there. If you are feeling really rough, dont waste valuable minutes climbing out of your oilskins. Dive below, hit the bunk, pull your sleeping bag over you and try to sleep. Unless you are sure you can cope, dont even undress. The benefits of undressing are well publicised, but they hardly apply if you are seasick in the attempt. Sure, youll make your bunk cushion wet, but that is a small price to pay for three hours rest without throwing up. People tend not to believe that the bunk is the best place until theyve tried it a few times, so all your powers of leadership will be required to persuade your crew to help themselves. But theyll thank you in the end. Of the various proprietary remedies for seasickness, the most effective seem to be those which work directly on the balance organs in the inner ear. Whether taken orally or through the skin, these drugs offer a reasonable degree of immunity, or at least relief, to the majority of people. My experience as a sailing instructor confirmed this proposition beyond a shadow of doubt. As skipper, youll have to make an assessment of the real condition of your seasick crew. Anyone who loses interest in life altogether should be sent to the bunk, encouraged to take water to ward off dehydration, and issued with a bucket. For the rest, it is surprising how most folk perk up after a while, or at least manage to remain useful. Try to give any members of this group something active to do while they are on watch. Look after them as best you can; they in their turn will look after the ship and will derive great satisfaction from having done their share in the face of one of lifes more debilitating disorders.
26. Fog
No one born of woman likes fog at sea. It strikes us more or less blind, which the sighted majority are unable to come to terms with. A sharp summer gale may be grist to a sailors mill, but whoever he is, fog causes the gnawings of unease deep in his vitals. At the worst, it can frighten him into irrationality. These anxieties are akin to fear of the dark. Just as the growth of adult reason dispels this childhood horror almost completely, education and experience go far towards neutralising fear of fog, though for most of us, the ghost of doubt always remains. Theres nothing inherently lethal about fog. Its the same stuff as that magic mist that creeps across the fields on late summer evenings. It doesnt even make you ill, but at sea it means you cant see where you are going and neither, in all probability, can anyone else. Radar helps, of course, but many of us dont have a set, and some who do cannot use it to its best advantage. The result is that we are liable to collide with vessels unknown, and while, with sensible use of GPS, we are no longer in doubt of our position, we are still thrown entirely onto our instruments if we are to keep out of navigational difficulties. Without GPS, we are not necessarily lost, but we are undoubtedly exposed to substantial additional danger. The best thing to do about fog is to listen to the forecast before you leave harbour and give the whole project a resounding miss if fog is predicted. Most of us suffer from the besetting sin of hoping for the best, however, so for those walloping bravely on regardless, here are some useful policies to adopt.
Fog seamanship
As soon as you have serviced your primary need by plotting your position, you can attend to the immediate well-being of ship and crew. Double the lookout This is always worth doing if possible. The collision regs demand it. Furthermore, if visibility is 50 metres or less, and your converging speed with another vessel is a boats length per second, as it often is, one lookout is just not enough. Ideally, the extra lookout should be stationed on the foredeck where he will be comparatively undisturbed by engine noise if you are motoring. Hell be listening for foghorns, engines and even bow-waves. Knocking the engine off every few minutes will help enormously. On some vessels it is also useful to contain the drone of the machinery by keeping the hatches closed. The direction of sound is often distorted by fog, so be circumspect about leaping to conclusions. It is, however, unusual for a foghorn on the port bow to sound as if it is coming from the starboard quarter. If a sound is repeated at regular intervals its often possible to detect a pattern in its direction which will prove useful. For example, homing in on a siren at a harbour mouth can usually be achieved successfully, given a reasonably wide safe path of approach. Listen out for unexpected sounds and use them creatively. I once navigated along the north coast of Norfolk on a mixture of echo sounder, compass, wild-fowlers guns and dogs barking on various bathing beaches. Be seen Hoist your radar reflector, if it isnt already aloft; it is your number one protection against collision. Turn on your navigation lights, as required by the Colregs, and begin sounding your foghorn if it seems remotely possible that anyone may hear it. One long blast if you are under power (Here I come, sounding one); one long and two short blasts if you are sailing. Leave your mainsail hoisted if you are motoring. Not only will it dampen your tendency to roll, it will also increase your prominence to a lookout high up on a ships bridge. Prepare for the worst One of the few occasions when those able to swim should wear lifejackets at sea on an undamaged yacht is in fog. If you were run down you could sink virtually without warning. If all hands have their lifers round their necks, there will be no unseemly scrabble for them in a rapidly filling cabin, or subsequently in the water for the only one that bobs up after the bubbles have stopped rising. Dont let anyone fall overboard in fog. This may sound obvious, but even so, it does no harm to remind the more boisterous of your crew that if they go over the wall, they may be lost to view and to everything else. If in doubt, clip on.
Fog tactics
Having prepared your ship and crew (a matter of minutes) and plotted your whereabouts, you are now in a strong position to decide what you should do. The first consideration is not to be run down. If you have a radar set, it will be warmed up by now because the Colregs specifically oblige you to use it in restricted visibility. Plot your contacts, take the relevant avoiding action, but dont forget that the fishing boat that may sink you is out there in the real world, not lurking in your glowing tube. In other words, use your radar by all means, but dont neglect your lookout. If you have no radar, clear yourself right away from the remote vicinity of any avoidable areas of shipping concentration. Having done this, you can decide where to go next, if anywhere. While you are inspecting the chart, the watch on deck can make an informed guess at the range of visibility. Try to relate this to the scale of known visible objects as they appear: buoys are best, seabirds come next and waves are last but are still better than nothing. If its oily calm, good luck to you. Without birds, buoys, passing seaweed or convenient flotsam youve nothing to go on but your wake and the length of your yacht, so unless you are very rich, your guess is unlikely to be accurate. Should you be well out at sea and clear of shipping, you will undoubtedly plump for option number one. This is simply to press on with caution at a safe speed and maintain your plot. A variant of option one, when no better possibility presents itself, is to stay at sea and heave to, even if your passage is not advanced by doing so. At least you are safe from rocks and shoals out there. Options two and three involve the shore. If there is no convenient safe harbour, you might choose option two. Work your boat into water too shallow for commercial vessels, then either anchor or stooge about until visibility improves. There is much to be said for this tactic, particularly if the wind is offshore. So long as you can find an area clear of dangers, it involves little navigational finesse and gives you a good chance of keeping out of trouble. If you have no GPS, you can still use your sounder and work a plot from your starting-point. This will give you an approximate position which may well be good enough to be safe. The big negative feature of option two is that it leaves you at sea. Youll be more popular with your crew if you can manage to get in somewhere. Option three is to go looking for a harbour. Once secured alongside, you are as safe as you can be, so long as you can enter this happy state with minimal risk of stranding in the search. GPS and radar, if you have them, make the whole proposition infinitely less stressful than it was even in the 1980s. However, since nothing under heaven can be absolutely relied upon, well first consider the business from the viewpoint of Natural Man, unassisted by anything but traditional systems. If, by any chance, you find yourself with no electronics working save your echo sounder, one thing not to do is aim straight for the harbour of your choice. Unless visibility is within the error of your EP, you will almost certainly miss. You wont know whether to turn to port or starboard when you see the beach or come on to soundings, and you will then be officially lost. Well offshore, with no dangers near by, in good visibility, you shouldnt mind at all if you are uncertain of your position to a mile or so. As soon as visibility deteriorates, however, paranoia sets in and we feel we must know our exact whereabouts. If we could see where we were going, we would be content to squirt our boats in the general direction of our destination, then refine our course as we came closer in. In fog, we can do exactly this, but one extra factor is required. Without the far-seeing eyes of electronics, we must ensure that we miss our destination, and we must miss it by far enough to one particular side, so that there can be no possible ambiguity. Choose the side with a safe depth contour running up to the harbour mouth. If there isnt one on either side, forget the harbour, even if you have a GPS, unless either it is cross-checked by radar, or you are prepared to take the chance that it will not let you down at the crucial moment. Your electronics are going to be used to assist the classical approach mentioned below. They dont change anything radically unless you are equipped and confident with radar. They merely make the job easier and even more certain. If you rely on them implicitly and they go down or misread, youre in real trouble.
If a good, clean contour presents itself, run in until your sounder picks it up, then turn along it towards the harbour. In areas of big tidal rise youll have to reduce your depth to soundings, but that is the only complication. Steer inshore across the contour until depths shoal, then come out 40 until you are to seaward of the line. Now come in again, and so on until you find your landfall buoy, or harbour wall, or even the suddenly deep water of your river mouth. The technique is simple and, given suitable topography, it works every time. A wise skipper, with GPS but no radar to supply a second source of electronic position finding, does well to adopt this policy. By refining his position and reassuring himself with the electronics, success will be assured. If, on the other hand, GPS alone is used to steer direct for the harbour, unless a fortuitous line of soundings can continuously confirm the position, the only other source of input would be what may prove a fairly dubious EP. While the EP for a sailor running in for a depth contour well to one side of a harbour entrance demands only minimal accuracy, to achieve the pinpoint precision of a direct hit in 50 metres visibility it would need to be phenomenal. The GPS would therefore be an unconfirmed source of data. If it went down, all might be lost, so unless a sure-fire route of retreat is available, stick to the old ways and augment them with GPS accuracy. If it ails, no problem! Shrug your shoulders and take more notice of the echo sounder. Buoy hopping Sometimes it will he helpful to run from one buoy to the next, when there are enough of these to make success probable. Buoy hopping with GPS and especially radar presents few difficulties, and it can be most reassuring to see the metalwork loom out of the gloom. Without them, it should only be attempted when to fail would not be catastrophic. Miss one buoy and youve had it, so dont rely on the technique exclusively if in doubt. If visibility is good enough to be certain of finding the bubble of clearness around the next buoy without electronic assistance, you are in good shape, but if the fog is thick, the buoys far apart and the currents strong, you may be backing a lame horse. Always remember that you can take a personal
observation of set and drift with great accuracy (see Chapter 15).
Position fixing
GPS is a life-saver for the sailor in big waves. Any position line derived from a magnetic compass in a rough sea was likely to be of poor quality in a small craft. There was little to be done about this, other than to watch the card swing either side of the object you were sighting and mentally average out the difference between the two extremes of its movement. If it careered around between 135 and 160, youd plot the bearing as 147, hoping for the best but assuming the worst in a seamanlike manner. The resulting enormous cocked hat was more akin to an area of position than a fix, and you would assume yourself situated in the most dangerous part of it. If none of the triangle lay near a danger, the course from it still demanded close inspection. Did it pass near rocks, shoals or overfalls? If so, the track was worked up by taking departure from the corner of it nearest to the danger. Unless you suffer an electronic melt-down, all this is mercifully now history, but you should still keep a clear eye on transits if you possibly can, maintain an interest in your surroundings to keep estimating where you should he, and always double-check your fix with the echo sounder.
The same techniques for uncertainty can usefully be applied to plotting the tidal vector. Bear in mind that the strong winds may be affecting streams in a manner you are unable to predict. Your distance run may also be in doubt, because your carefully calibrated log, be it a trailing spinner or a through-hull impeller, may well be spending part of its day out of the water registering either airspeed, or nothing much at all. The result of all the uncertainty engendered by bad weather is that, while GPS helps enormously, entering any area where precise navigation is of the essence may still be imprudent. The precision of electronic fixing can lead to a sense of overconfidence in deep water that is rapidly dispelled when the boat broaches her way into a narrow harbour entrance swept by breakers. Harbours of refuge must have easy, unambiguous approaches. Wide but sheltered roadsteads suddenly become seductively attractive, even if you do roll at anchor. Trying to spot a flashing buoy rising and falling on 5 metre waves in the dark is not a reliable way to save your ship, so if a plan depends upon this to confirm the position, abandon it if you have an option to go somewhere else. Keep your chart table tidy, look after your plot and your log book. Fight the natural tendency to let navigational discipline go to pieces and never allow a box full of printed circuits, chips and tiny wires take over the responsibility which remains yours alone until the vessel under your command is securely in her chosen berth.
- Nut splitter often useful for jobs other than removing rigging lock nuts ** Split pins, etc ** Spare rigging screw to replace any which may be bent in an accident. Bent screws cannot be relied upon ** Clevis and cotter pins are required Sail repairs ** Palm ** Selection of needles stowed in an oil-filled tube ** Waxed sail twine and whipping twine ** Spinnaker repair tape for all get-you-home repairs to any sail * Spare sail-cloth for more serious jobs ** Contact adhesive for sticking patches to sails before stitching around them General ** Hacksaw , junior hacksaw and blades * Baby spanners ** Mole, or vice grips medium and very small. Baby versions are exceedingly useful you can even tune pianos with them on a one-off basis ** Twist drill, hi-speed metal bits, and centre punch bits to be kept in a screw-top jar, well oiled ** Hammers medium claw, heavy lump, and a soft combination hammer for hitting threaded ends ** Set of soft-wood tapered bungs to block off damaged seacocks * A few hardwood blocks to use as drifts, anvils etc * Soft brass or bronze drift ** Saw with at least a 500 mm blade, smaller for GRP craft ** Chisels 25 mm and 10 mm, as required * Portable vice or Work-Mate and a site designated for it to be mounted. Vices are available which fit into the top of a winch-barrel ** Two files one large, and one triangular thread file ** Selection of lubricants and greases ** Stilson or pipe spanner also efficacious on extremely large nuts * G-clamps particularly important if no vice is carried ** Emery paper, or wet-and-dry sandpaper for cleaning electrical terminals, etc * Miners head-torch ** Good torches, and batteries - Old driving mirror, or dentists mirror ** Seizing wire ** Wire coat-hangers as purveyed by dry-cleaners vital when you need to improvise hooks, probes etc ** Sharp knife * Sharpening stone * Araldite, Superglue and Vaseline (for battery terminals) Bits boxes Ideally, these should be watertight containers of the type now favoured for packed lunches. Their contents and extent will reflect their proprietors character, but remember the important maxim, If in doubt, take it with you. No boat should put to sea without a good supply of screws, bolts, odd nuts, washers, spare blocks, shackles, pieces of inner tube, threaded rod, coach bolts, gasket material, undefinable items and things that go bump in the night. If the weight is a problem and you are cruising youve chosen the wrong boat.
Jury rigs
Standing rigging The stainless steel wire standing rigging favoured by most modern cruising yachts is immensely strong and stable. The fittings by which it is attached to hull and spars are cunningly contrived and, considering how much is expected of them, they are extremely reliable. Even so, rigging failure has not been entirely eliminated from the list of sailors headaches. Rigging wire rarely breaks half-way along its length. Fractures almost invariably occur where the wire joins the terminal fitting, especially if there are no proper arrangements for universal movement. Inspect your rig regularly, aloft and at deck level, because its working life is not indefinite. The first sign of failure in a 1 x 19 stainless steel wire will probably be the parting of a single strand. Immediate action is then imperative, not only because of a strength loss, but since where one strand has parted, more are liable to follow. Shroud failure Rigging failure does not always mean instant dismasting, so long as you tack immediately you see a shroud on the windward side fail or begin to strand. Better still, heave to on the opposite tack. Both actions relieve the damaged wire, which can be either repaired, replaced, or jury-rigged. Split seconds count here. There is no time to waste admiring the banana-shaped mast. Forestay or backstay failure A mast may be in dire straits following the loss of a shroud, but when a forestay or a backstay carries away it will be lucky to survive. There is, however, a slim chance that if the backstay lets go, the combined effect of the lower shrouds and the leech of a close-hauled mainsail will hold it up long enough for the crew to act. Similarly, a damaged forestay may be covered for a few moments by the luff of the jib, or a halyard stowed on the pulpit combined with a baby stay, but the only real hope lies in an immediate manoeuvre to relieve the injured wire. There is not a watch-tick to lose. Getting you home If a shroud has failed it may be unwise to drop the sails, because they are steadying the boat. The first thing to do once the damage is on the lee side is set up the most convenient item of spare running rigging in place of the lost stay or shroud. The main halyard, for example, may well prove the most effective jury backstay. If a cap shroud carries away, extra spread can often be supplied by passing a jury shroud which will probably be the spinnaker halyard through the beak of a solidly set up spinnaker pole before winching it tight. Semi-permanent repairs All yachts venturing seriously offshore should carry a length of rigging wire a little longer than the longest shroud or stay, and of similar gauge to the heaviest. Add to this half a dozen bulldog-grips and a selection of thimbles. If your boat uses patent end-fittings, it may not be possible to replace them on board. If you can, a few spare terminals and the necessary vices and spanners may save the mast; if you cannot, the spare shroud should be longer still, and be equipped with one fitting at either end. Where two forms of terminal are used, one of each should be fitted to the wire. Careful cutting of both the broken shroud or stay and the spare wire will allow the replacement fitting to be installed while the attached length of wire is bulldog-gripped to what remains of the original. Yachts have crossed oceans with their rigging splinted like this. The secret is forethought.
Steering failure
It is a statistical fact that loss of steering is one of the most popular reasons for yachtsmen to give up the struggle for self-reliance and call for help. Losing your rudder, or the means of controlling it, is undoubtedly a serious matter, but it does not usually present an immediate threat to life. The ship is not about to burn to the waterline, and unless she is amongst rocks or in seas of exceptional severity, she will continue to swim indefinitely. Losing your primary steering system will normally allow you time to reflect, and given a well-equipped tool-locker and plenty of bits and pieces, it is surprising what an inventive group of sailors can contrive. Some wheel steering failures are readily repairable at sea, others are totally impossible. If all attempts to fix the system meet with frustration, it will be necessary to rig the emergency tiller, which should be conveniently accessible and be tried before it is ever needed. These items are not always as ideal as they would appear, and you dont want to find out how impossible the thing is to use when you are seasick and in danger. Rudder loss No one can call himself a yachtmaster until he has a thorough understanding of rig and hull balance, and their effects upon steering. These are always important, but when the rudder is lost they become vital, because no jury rudder is as effective as the real thing, so it needs all the help it can get. There are numerous possibilities for rigging a jury rudder, including making full use of any wind-vane steering system and its attendant servo or auxiliary rudder, but the most commonly effective method is to press the spinnaker pole into service. The spinnaker pole rudder This system has been proved to work. A dinghy paddle, or something larger, is securely lashed to the pole, which is itself lashed loosely but safely to the pushpit so that the paddle blade is well submerged and the inboard end can be man-handled. Using the steering oar thus formed is largely selfexplanatory, but there are some predictable problems. The biggest difficulty is keeping the business end down in the water. As the boat moves ahead, water flow tends to float the pole up. This effect can be neutralised in some cases by weighting it down with, for instance, an anchor, which offers the added advantage of increasing the poles water resistance. The other usual difficulty is that actually pushing the inboard end of the pole from port to starboard and back again can become very tiring. Control lines rigged through quarter blocks to the sheet winches can help.
Dismasting
It is surprising how rarely crew personnel are injured in a dismasting. The greatest threat presented by the broken or dismounted spar is to the ship herself. A significant weight of aluminium tubing, rope, wire and sailcloth slamming alongside a thin hull can do terrible damage. It can even sink the yacht. As soon as you have checked that your crew are safe, or have arranged first aid if they are not, your first priority is not to start the engine. If you do, a fouled propeller is virtually guaranteed with all that rubbish in the water. And a fouled propeller will deprive you of your most obvious means of arriving at a safe haven without troubling the search and rescue services. The motion of a boat deprived of the roll inertia of her mast is terrible in a rough sea, so you may find it necessary to advise deck workers to clip on to the jackstays, particularly if the guard-rails have been carried away. Your choice is now whether or not to cut away the mast. If you were in mid-ocean, you would be well advised to try and secure the wreckage, because it is from those remains that you would have to fashion a jury rig. Within engine range of a harbour, the question becomes rather different. The gear over the side could be badly damaged and it is probably insured. While the underwriters may be unhappy about an owner committing his rig to the deep, they would presumably be even less pleased if he gave it a chance to hole the yacht herself, taking their whole risk to Davy Joness Locker. Once the mast is either gone or fully secured, and you are absolutely certain that there are no stray ropes or wires under the water, then, and only then, can the engine be started. If the mast has been saved, great care must be taken that nothing is loose, and so long as the boat is under power with the spar alongside, ceaseless vigilance will be required to make sure the propeller is not fouled. Many a simple dismasting has been transformed into a disaster by the propeller grabbing the one halyard that was left trailing.
29. Emergencies
Having considered damage control and self-help in Chapter 28, we must now turn our attention to the sort of emergency which you cannot deal with using your own resources. Man overboard is an emergency by any definition, but it is one which, primarily at least, you can tackle yourself. It therefore does not form part of this section, but is considered separately in Chapter 30. There are many reasons why yachts find themselves having to call out the Search and Rescue (SAR) services. Some are obvious; others surprising. The table below shows a breakdown of the reasons for lifeboat call-outs in the UK and is fairly typical of worldwide circumstances. Studying this will build up an awareness of the things which usually go wrong. To be aware is to be on guard, so take notice of the figures. Stranding usually follows a failure of navigation or pilotage, though it may occasionally result directly from adverse conditions. Machinery failure aboard a sailing craft should only be a true emergency on the rarest of occasions. Adverse conditions can often be avoided, and no vessel should intentionally be exposed to weather which she may not be able to handle. And so on down the list. Think about each heading, and be aware of its implications for any boat you may be skippering, under any given set of circumstances. Speak to any SAR personnel and you will be surprised at how comfortably they live with the messy business of human frailty. There but for the Grace of God, go I, is their philosophy. I once criticised a sailor who had called out a lifeboat under circumstances which, in my opinion, went no way towards warranting it. The coxn of the lifeboat was a friend of mine, and he put me firmly in my place. Listen, he said, the truth is that a person is in danger at any time when he thinks he is in danger. What is no problem for you might be a cause for panic in someone else. His message is absolutely clear. If in doubt, call them out. SAR crews would far rather return home after what proved to be a false alarm than arrive ten minutes too late and have to bring bodies back to shore. This is not only the private view of my chum the coxn, it is also the official position. It is therefore very important that you take the time to consider your own views on self-sufficiency. Lifeboat launches to sailing yachts in 2004 RNLI Statistics 2004 Sailing Craft only Cause of Service Launches Abandoned Adverse Conditions Capsize Collision Drags Anchor Fire Fouled Propeller Ill Crewman Land Persons Leaks/Swamping Machinery Failure Man Overboard May be Trouble Other Out of Fuel Overdue Position Unsure Sail Failure Steering Failure Stranding Grand Total 51 268 163 18 13 12 85 63 1 55 326 41 103 11 18 21 20 94 58 290 1711 Lives Saved Rescued 0 19 17 0 0 0 0 4 0 12 20 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 3 16 100 5 213 118 14 11 6 165 64 2 50 731 15 0 3 43 2 16 146 118 276 1998
If you are within radio reach of help when things begin to go badly wrong, dont forget that there is such a thing as PAN PAN (urgency) call. Let the coastguard know what your problem is and what you are doing about it. This will enable him to make sure that SAR services are on stand-by should they be required. The time saved in the event of your untimely issuing a MAYDAY broadcast could be vital. The other important use of the PAN PAN call is the PAN PAN MEDICO. These are used to prefix calls to coast radio stations requesting medical advice. Should you have a medical problem on board which requires urgent attention beyond your immediate knowledge, a doctor will talk to you free of charge via this service. If it is decided that the casualty requires evacuation from the yacht, either the lifeboat will be launched or an SAR helicopter scrambled.
Lifeboat rescue
Time spent waiting for the lifeboat is emphatically not to be considered as a period of inactivity. The call for help is no capitulation of your responsibility, nor is it necessarily a cause for humiliation. With the best will in the world, anyone could be dismasted, for example. The lifeboat crew know this and are not thinking any the worse of you for your predicament. Probably the most important single item is to communicate with the lifeboat if you possibly can, as early as you are able. This will achieve a number of things: in the first place, you can tell the coxn where you are. As a competent skipper you can, at worst, offer him an EP. At best, you should give him an electronically derived position. When you see the lifeboat approaching (flashing blue light if in the dark), advise the boat of her position relative to your own by radio, because you may see her before you yourself are noticed. At night, if you can discern her navigation lights, let off a red pinpoint flare if you think she may not have seen you. If her running lights are in your line of sight, your flare is visible to her crew. Another reason for talking with the lifeboat coxn is to tell him more about your vessel, the nature of your problem, what you are doing about it, and the form of assistance you require. The information is useful in itself, but in fact it goes beyond this. The way you are communicating tells the lifeboat people a great deal about your emotional condition and about how able you might be to co-operate in the rescue. Whatever your state of mind or overall competence, the SAR are better able to help you if they are aware of it. If you are hoping for a tow, you should do all you can to prepare your boat. Decide where a line will best be attached. Look round for ways of relieving the load on a bow cleat, if that is to be used, and be ready. Have all your crew wearing their lifejackets and harnesses, and clear away any debris, particularly ropes which may be hanging over the side. Even lifeboats can foul their propellers. Never shine a powerful light in the direction of a lifeboat, for reasons which should be obvious. The lifeboat carries searchlights and will supply such extra illumination as circumstances may warrant. Be ready for this flood of light, and resist the temptation to look straight into its source. Remember that you remain in command of your own vessel. Where there is no need to transfer personnel, dont attempt it, because if the lifeboat comes alongside in a seaway, you must expect to sustain structural damage. A yachts best emergency fenders are well-stuffed sailbags. If the sails inside are neatly folded, take them out and bundle them in willy-nilly. Youll be surprised at how little damage even the bags sustain during a short encounter.
Helicopter rescue
It should always be borne in mind that helicopters have a limited flying time, which means that there is not a moment to lose during a rescue. It is therefore vital to prepare yourself and your boat while the helicopter is on the way. Location You will probably spot the helicopter before its crew identifies you. Keep a good lookout and when you see it, use any available means to attract its attention. Ideally, this might be a smoke flare or red pinpoint (not a parachute flare, with aircraft in the vicinity shooting down the helicopter is a poor start to the proceedings), VHF or a homing beacon. Alternatively, you can use a lamp or a mirror, and wave the ensign a brightly coloured lifejacket or even a coloured shirt. As with the lifeboat, communicate with the SAR crew. I am behind you on your left side, etc. A helicopter is a noisy machine. Talking with crews on VHF is not easy. Be aware of this and always be ready to ask radio operators to say again their message. Survivor rescue No two rescues are the same. You will be asked to comply with requests of the helicopter crew, and this you should do, to the letter if possible. However, regardless of the operation, you should endeavour to prepare your boat as follows: Secure all loose gear on deck, or place it below. Unsecured covers, ropes, litter, etc. are easily lifted by the downdraught of the rotors. If they are ingested by the helicopters engine they can, quite simply, cause the aircraft to crash. Provide a clear place for transferring personnel up and down. In most sailing yachts the best area is the cockpit. If possible, drop the mainsail (headsail too if your engine is working), lower the boom to the deck on the starboard side and take the topping lift to the mast. The winchman is going to board you on the port quarter because the pilot sits to starboard in the aircraft and he needs to see you, so clear away everything movable from that area. All danbuoys, aerials and the rest must be removed from the stern. Stand by to receive instructions. Be ready to operate at the course and speed the pilot asks for. This will probably be as fast as you can comfortably motor in an upwind direction. At night, the helicopter may survey you for some time with searchlights to locate obstructions. Be ready to turn your deck lights on or off as required. Whatever you do, maintain a steady course and speed during the transfer. Designate a reliable helmsman and dont let him be distracted by the temptation to watch the show. The racket of a helicopter overhead at low altitude is dreadful. Brief your crew about this and dont let it alarm either you or them. The lift Under ideal conditions it is possible that a helicopter crewman will be winched straight down to you. He will bring with him either a lifting strop or a stretcher, and will take off either a casualty or all hands one at a time, whichever is required. It is important when you are being lifted that you only help when asked to do so. Once you are in the strop, keep your arms by your side. When you are up alongside the helicopter, do nothing until instructed. If a stretcher is being employed, youll probably have to help the winchman to place your casualty in it. It is the winchmans responsibility to oversee the transfer, so you must obey his instructions. Hi-line transfer When the weather or the cluttered landing environment likely to be offered by a yacht make it difficult for a winchman to be lowered direct, a Hi-line transfer may be used. The Hi-line is an extension line attached by a weak link to the hook on the winch cable. Its weighted free end is lowered to the yacht and used for guiding the rescue device (a strop, a stretcher or, more probably, a winchman) down to your deck. Here is the usual order of events: Helicopter lowers the Hi-line to you. Let the line touch the sea or the yacht before you grab it, otherwise you may receive a shock from static electricity. Take in the slack on the line. Flake it down safely, but under no circumstances make it fast. If you allow a tug of war situation to arise, the weak link in the line will break. The helicopter will now move away so that the pilot can take visual references. Keep working the slack on the Hi-line. A winchman or a rescue device (strop or stretcher) will now be lowered. Use the Hi-line to steady this and guide it, or him, on board. The job may require a hefty pull, so choose someone strong to handle the line. If a winchman is sent down to you, he will take charge. If not, secure evacuees as appropriate and signal to lift with thumbs up. Note that lifting strops have a toggle which should be pushed down towards the evacuees body as far as possible for maximum security. Keep your arms by your sides when you are on the wire. Ease out on the Hi-line as the lift is in progress, using it to dampen any swinging. Keep it in hand, however, as it may be needed again. Release the Hi-line only when no further lifts are needed and when you are instructed to do so. If the helicopter crew decide that even Hi-lining is too dangerous, they may ask you to stream the casualty astern in a dinghy on a long painter. In order to facilitate rapid evacuation of more than one casualty, the helicopter can send down two strops so that two people can be lifted at a time, under the winchmans supervision.
Pyrotechnics
You cannot have too many flares. They are, however, expensive to buy and since you hope never to use them, it comes hard to spend more than you must. The answer for the thinking boat owner is therefore to ship a complete outfit of up to date flares and smoke signals, but to keep your older ones aboard as well. Unless they came from HMS Victory, there is a good chance that they will work. They could save your life. Red rocket (parachute) flares are used to indicate that there is a vessel in distress. They may not show exactly where you are, but they will attract attention if they are seen. Should your parachute flares be in short supply, do not blaze away willy-nilly. If you can, wait until you see a ships lights on the horizon, unless you are near an inhabited coast. Rocket flares should be launched pointing skywards, but slightly downwind. They will then recurve to windward and burst overhead. If a flare fails to fire, dont peer into the top to find out what is wrong. It may just be a slow starter. Red rocket flares should ideally be used in pairs, because if somebody sees one out of the corner of his eye, he will turn and look at it, musing, That looked like a red flare. I wonder if it really was When he sees the second one which you send up half a minute after the first has died, he knows whats what and reacts. If you only have four rockets, save the second pair as long as you can. Red pinpoint (hand-held) flares are used to indicate your exact position. If you can see the side lights of a small vessel, she will certainly be able to make out your flare, because although you may be lower and partially obscured by waves, it is a hundred times brighter than her steaming lights. Always hold a pinpoint flare to leeward. Smoke canisters are used to indicate your position in daylight. Launch or hold them to leeward. White rocket flares can be of inestimable value when searching for a man overboard, or in any other emergency which requires a general lighting-up of the scene. Hand-held whites are your final defence against being run down. When all else fails and you cant get out of the way, ignite a white flare. The ships lookout, if there is such a person on the bridge, will see that for certain.
The reach-turn-reach
This method works well in a moderate-sized, manoeuvrable yacht with an expert in command. It is successful in any conditions and has the benefit of not requiring any recourse to the engine. Here is how it goes, step by step: 1. Immediately sail the boat away, properly trimmed, on a true beam reach. Now you should hit the MOB button on your GPS and mark the time, if appropriate. 2. As soon as you have enough room to manoeuvre (how much this is depends on many factors; only practice can give you the necessary expertise), either tack or gybe. Bear in mind that tacking will take you further upwind. Gybing will lose you ground. Either may be what you require. 3. You want to approach the casualty on a close-reach, because no other point of sailing gives you such control over the boats speed. So steer directly for him, release your sheets to see if all sails will spill wind on demand, and determine whether or not her attitude to the wind is to your satisfaction. 4. If she is on a close-reach, lose way just as if you were picking up a mooring with no tide running (as in Chapter 5). 5. If shes below a reach (ie. to leeward of the desired heading, or too hard on the wind), make all the ground you can close-hauled, above the target, before bearing away and spilling wind on your final close-reaching approach. Fail to do this, and the boat will stall into the windward sector as soon as you try to slow down. 6. If shes above the desired heading (youll see this immediately because the mainsail will refuse to spill wind), bear away sharply, run downwind for a few metres, then shape up for the casualty once more, reassessing your angle to the wind. 7. You sailed away from the casualty initially in order to gain the searoom to execute either of these last two manoeuvres, should they be required. Do not waste that ground through indecision. 8. In moderate conditions, youll discover that if you stop to windward of the man with the breeze well out on your weather bow, the stalling boat will slide down towards him, particularly if you put the helm hard down to luff off the last of her way. You will now be able to pick up amidships. Watch out for flogging jib sheets and if youve a roller genoa, furl it before you go out on the deck. 9. In hard weather, you may prefer to stop a few metres away from the casualty and heave him a line so as to avoid any possibility of running him down. When its really blowing, there is a respectable school of thought which says you should stop to leeward of the man so as not to be driven down on to him.
Finding that close-reach in the heat of the moment requires judgement of a moderately high order. Dont be disheartened if it seems hard going when you begin to practise, and never forget that in a genuine crisis there is nothing to stop you having your engine turning over check round for ropes over the side first! to give the boat a last shove up to windward if need be. Try the manoeuvre again every so often and see if you are improving, but stick to the crash-stop method described below if you are in the slightest doubt. Reach-turn-reach is said by some to be the best way of coming back to a casualty in the water, but it has two drawbacks. To be sure of pulling it off, boat handling of a high standard is required, and it involves taking the boat away from the casualty while working up the searoom for the pick-up approach. At night, you may well be uncertain that the victim has caught hold of the flashing light you threw him; the light may even have failed to function such occurrences are all too common so you may feel that the risk of losing touch with him in the dark is too great. Even so, it is well worth taking the time to practise the method, especially if your engine is unreliable, non-existent, or lacks the power to deliver the punch needed in heavy seas.
Crash stop
The crash stop method offers the huge benefit of keeping boat and man overboard close together throughout the affair. This is what you do: 1. As soon as your man goes over the side, push the helm hard down, regardless of your point of sailing. This will normally tack the boat. 2. Leave your headsail sheets made fast so that the jib and/or staysail come aback. 3. The yacht is now effectively hove to. The reality in a seaway is that this is often a messy manoeuvre, with ropes and sails flailing around in disarray, but in spite of this discomfort, the boat will often settle down close enough to the casualty to pass him a line. If this isnt the case, it may well be worth trying to work the boat across to him by juggling sheets and tiller. 4. If it looks as though you will not come close enough to affect a rescue, you will have to motor-sail. This is where the modern yacht with her powerful, reliable auxiliary scores over her predecessors, but first, you have a job to do. Unless you have a spare person to detail for the duty, nip below, press the MOB button on your GPS assuming it is running and note the time. Now carry on with the main task. 5. Motor-sailing from the hove-to mode is the favourite means if you entertain secret doubts about your capacity to make the grade as a boat handler. It is also the best way to teach your crew to cope in the event of the real catastrophe of falling overboard yourself. 6. Keeping a constant eye on the victim, drop your hcadsail or roll it away. Now work the boat to a point downwind of the casualty and start the engine after double-checking, then checking again, that no rope of any description can find its way into the propeller. The pick-up is made with the boat approaching from slightly off dead downwind with the mainsheet pinned amidships. The sail steadies the boat while the propeller maintains control, but it is important to keep the person in the water towards the shoulder of the boat. A propeller can inflict traumatic injuries on a swimmer which, in his already shocked state, could render the object of the whole exercise somewhat futile. 7. With a conscious and uninjured casualty it is always better to lose the last of your way five metres from him and toss him a line, than to risk injuring him by direct contact in a seaway.
Probably the most difficult man-overboard scenarios occur when you are on a run, either with spinnaker set, or with a headsail poled out. There are a number of ways to deal with these undesirable situations depending upon the boat, the skill of her crew, her size and various other factors. It is therefore impossible to generalise. The only responsible answer is to consider deeply what you would do under these circumstances, then try your theory out in practice using a bucket and fender tied together as a dummy victim. If it doesnt work, think again until you find something that does.
31. Weather
The two most important variables in yachting are the tides and the weather. Tides we can predict, years ahead if need be; weather is different. With the exception of the trade wind belts of tropical and subtropical latitudes, we are down to comparatively short-term weather forecasts and informed personal observation when we need to know what the wind is going to do (and who doesnt?). For coastal and offshore sailing, we can find most of what we require in the numerous commercial and free public sources of meteorological information. These range from radio, TV, Navtex and weatherfax, through harbourmasters notice boards and newspapers. The trouble is that forecasting has become so sophisticated that there is a growing temptation to rely upon it implicitly and ignore the old ways. The sky, the sea state and the manner in which the cows are sitting in a riverside field are still useful sources of data to those with the knowledge to use them, and sometimes the official weather predictions are out of reach when more primitive signs are plainly manifest. The true answer to enjoying the weather and not being caught napping by it is to make informed use of forecasts where they are available, and to temper the information or, if need be, substitute it with what your senses are telling you. However, you can do neither if you do not understand the basis of air movements. For our purposes at least, this is not a complicated subject, and the essence of what the temperate waters yachtmaster needs to know is set out below. The explanation revolves around the anatomy of the most common wind-inducing weather system of middle and high latitudes: the depression. If Erik the Red could take a stroll down a modern marina pontoon on a stormy day there would be little that he could recognise except the rain. Bad weather is the same now as it was in the good old days and it stems from exactly the same causes. Nowadays we can predict it, draw computer models of it and build ships so huge that they are not unduly bothered by it, but so far we havent made it go away.
Air circulation
A person standing at the Equator is actually moving very quickly relative to the space above him, with the turning of the Earth. An explorer stationed at the Pole isnt moving in any direction at all. Instead, he is pirouetting like a skater in a slow spin, executing one revolution every 24 hours. If the sun-lover careering round at the Equator could hurl a ball far enough to get anywhere near the polar explorer, it would not arrive because it would carry with it a component of its original lateral movement and would curve off to one side long before it reached the Pole. Similarly, if the deep-freeze merchant threw a ball from the Pole towards his chum on the Equator, by the time it reached the 0 degree parallel, its target would have been carried smartly eastwards, leaving the ball to fall into the ocean at a point way to the west of where he was standing when it was thrown. If you could trace its route on the Earths surface it would appear to curve away westwards as it left the higher latitudes. The same is true of any free-moving item in the atmosphere with a north-south component in its direction of travel, including an air mass. In the northern hemisphere this tendency causes air to circulate clockwise around a high pressure area and anticlockwise around a centre of low pressure, rather than flow directly from high to low as would otherwise be the case.
Depression formation
At the polar front in the northern hemisphere the high pressure centre of the cold polar air lies to the northwards, so as air tries to flow southwards towards the low pressure centre it is displaced to the westwards along the front, setting up the clockwise circulation of the system. Down in the Horse Latitudes (somewhere in the 30s), the other side of the low pressure zone, lies the mid-oceanic high. This is typified by the Azores high in the North Atlantic, which is funnelling tropical maritime air up its western leg towards the polar front. By the time this air has reached the front, it is moving to the eastwards and is still part of the main clockwise circulation of the oceanic system. Where the two air masses are actually colliding, the warm air will tend to rise as the dense, cold air tries to slide underneath it like a wedge. As this happens, the moisture in the tropical maritime air condenses in the form of clouds, and rain.
The situation is inherently unstable. Two independent air masses trying to overlap one another while they travel in opposite directions doesnt encourage peace on earth. It takes little disturbance to produce an eddy in the airflow at the front. Such a kink on the front may result from a local area of extra warming which causes the warmer air to rise slightly faster and the cold air to try to push in behind. It can also result from the presence of a mountain (Pico in the Azores creates amazing eddies in the air) or just a particularly heavy inrush of one type of air into the space of the other.
Once a wave has formed on the front, things take on a life of their own. The diagram below shows how a package of warm, moist air moves up into a salient in the cold air to the north of it. As it does so, cold air moves down behind it from the north and tries to undercut it. The warm air is rising, causing precipitation which releases what is known as latent heat. This extra heat helps to energise the system and set up the cyclonic circulation. Within 24 hours the eddy will have developed into a young depression showing a warm front (a front with warm air behind it, overlapping the cold air it is displacing), a cold front (followed by colder air which undercuts the warm air) and a complete anticlockwise air circulation. It will then set off on its lifes journey.
Depression tracks
The movements of individual depressions do not conform to a tight stereotype. However, by studying averages over a period of years it is possible to draw some general conclusions. In its first day or two of life, the vertical development of a depression is comparatively modest and is unlikely to penetrate the jet stream wind systems of the upper atmosphere. Because it is not interfering with these, the young low will tend to move along their general direction, which more often than not is north-easterly. As it matures, the system extends its influence higher and higher until it is distorting the upper winds. It will probably then slow down and may turn from its straight track usually, but not always, to the left. Ultimately, as we shall see, the circulatory mechanism stalls and decays.
Frontal anatomy
The boundaries of the warm sector of a depression are marked by a warm front on its leading edge and a cold front behind. As a warm front moves along, it pushes across the upper cold air first and gradually comes down to sea level over a width of anything up to 200 miles. The first visible evidence of a warm front arriving is the presence of high mares tail clouds known as cirrus. These are followed by a layer of thin cirrostratus cloud which often begins by generating a halo round the sun or moon but ends by obscuring the sky completely as the cloud base falls and thickens up. This is accompanied by a failing barometer and the wind will be backing (shifting anticlockwise), generally to the south or southeast. The breeze, which is now strong if the depression is built on a sharp pressure gradient, will veer (shift clockwise) as the front goes through. The barometer will probably stop falling. Rain is now intermittent and visibility remains moderate or poor with fog a possibility. The wind will typically be from the south-west.
A warm front
You are now in the warm sector. How long you stay there will depend upon the size and rate of progress of the weather system, but 12 hours would not be uncommon. As the cold front approaches, the wind may back a little and pressure often drops. Rain will fall more heavily and conditions generally deteriorate. The arrival of a fully-paid-up cold front can be one of natures more dramatic atmospheric events. Because the cold air is heavier than that in the warm sector, it pushes along at sea-level first, with its wedge of air rising to great heights astern of it. You dont get a lot of warning, but you cant miss it when it comes. Classically, the wind veers sharply into the north-west with a ripper of a squall to accompany it. The barometer climbs rapidly and visibility suddenly opens up as the cold, clear air streams down from the Arctic. Huge cumulonimbus clouds tower up to 30,000 ft, sometimes with anvil-shaped tops flying of to leeward in the thin upper atmosphere. As the advancing cold air drives the moisture upwards, convection in the clouds may be so powerful that the raindrops are carried aloft until they freeze, to rattle back to earth as hailstones. Blue sky reappears as the front moves past, and the wind moderates gradually.
A cold front
Occlusions
As the pair of fronts chase one another across the ocean, the depression is doomed from the outset because the cold front always moves faster than the warm. When the cold air behind the warm sector finally overtakes the cold air in front, its advancing wedge lifts the warm air of the sea, forming an occlusion. For a while this hangs around at a moderate altitude, producing varying degrees of unpleasantness, and although the writing is on the wall for the depression once this happens, the system may still remain active for quite some time as the occlusion spirals in around the centre. It is usually at this point in its life that a depression, if it is not to perish without issue, gives birth to one or more secondaries.
Secondary depressions
When a depression slows down, generally but not always on the eastern side of an ocean, it frequently trails its long cold front out behind it. The front, which is in effect once again a part of the polar front, is in a susceptible condition for the formation of a wave which will result in a new depression. These secondary depressions are often more violent than their parents. They can also develop with unforecast rapidity. For this reason it always pays to watch the western sky and the barometer carefully for a while when things seem to have cleared up. A belt of cirrus, a halo round the sun, a dip in the air pressure, and hold on to your hat! Theres more where the last one came from. If a low pressure system passes to the southward you may well avoid the frontal systems; the wind pattern still also be very different. Beginning in the south-east, the breeze will back to the east as the centre passes. It will then work round to north of east and may finally merge with the north-westerly airstream behind the cold front. Weather conditions on the north side of a depression are often less violent than in the frontal department down south, but there is still plenty of wind and rain about. In winter the north-east winds can be particularly severe.
Cyclonic winds
Conditions for the luckless mariner caught in the centre of a depression are grim in the extreme. If the system is vigorous, the windspeed could well vary between zero and force 8 in as many minutes, and the blast can come from any direction. Precipitation is highly probable and the sea state will be a shambles, with steep seas hurling themselves around in total confusion, looking for the discipline of an honest wind.
High pressure
Generally speaking, high pressure circulations are larger and more slow-moving than lows. They often bring settled weather, though at certain times of year this may be accompanied by poor visibility or even fog. High pressure weather typically favours the formation of sea breezes (see below).
The squeeze
It is not unusual in summer months to find yourself in an area of strong winds, with no particular weather system in the offing. This may be as a result of a squeeze of isobars, and is most likely to happen when you are situated between high and low pressure centres, neither of which is going anywhere particularly quickly. The winds generated can be strong and stable, giving near-gale conditions which continue for days out of a maddeningly clear sky.
Fog
Two types of fog are of interest to the yachtmaster. The first sort which creeps into harbours overnight, in spring and autumn, may well turn out to be land fog. This forms over chilled fields and river valleys under cold, clear skies during the hours of darkness. Usually, the sun burns it off soon after it rises, and even if it doesnt, there is every chance that the fog will not persist far out to sea. Far nastier is the sea fog generated by warm, moist air meeting colder seas. The classic example of sea fog is created when the tropical maritime air brought up the North American coast with the Gulf Stream meets the Arctic Labrador Current in the vicinity of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. The cold water lowers the temperature of the moist air until some of its water vapour precipitates out in the form of fog. Depending on the consistency of the water temperature and air condition, such fog can form in seemingly endless banks, or it may appear only in occasional patches. Often, it fades out in the lee of a headland and sometimes it can even be affected by the turn of the tide.
Sea breezes
Land warms up more rapidly than sea for a given heat input. It also cools down faster. As a result, on a hot, sunny day, in quiet gradient wind conditions, hot air will begin to rise over the land towards lunch-time. Cooler air moves in off the sea to take its place, creating as it does so a sea breeze over inshore waters. If there should be a light or moderate onshore gradient wind in addition to the conditions described above, the sea breeze will add itself to this, making up a strengthened wind for the period of its duration. Should the gradient wind be running offshore, the sea breeze will be subtractive, possibly knocking the airflow out altogether. Sea breezes in temperate zones are usually at their most noticeable in spring and early summer, when the ocean temperatures are substantially lower than those built up during the day ashore. A converse effect to the sea breeze is sometimes caused by the land cooling rapidly at night while the sea maintains a more even temperature. If the land falls below the heat of the sea, air rising over the water is displaced by cooler air flowing off the land. Such effects are generally less dramatic than the sea breeze of the daylight hours, but it can still produce some fine gusts off steep headlands with high ground behind them. Sea and land breezes are essentially local affairs. They can sometimes be felt 5 miles or more offshore, but they may fizzle out within the first thousand metres. They are, however, predictable to the local sailor with his eyes open. Many is the time Ive drifted in the West Solent around eleven oclock on a May morning, waiting for the fine southwest breeze that I knew would carry me as far as Cowes. Whether it would hold into the East Solent and on towards Hyde was another matter altogether, but if I could work down as far as Hayling Bay before the sun set, I could safely bet there would be wind aplenty being poured off the open Channel to cool the suntrap of the hot, flat fields around Chichester Harbour.
The G2 curve
Under theoretical conditions, a vessels ability to stay on her feet arises from two basic forces: the form stability which she possesses by virtue of her beam, and the pendulum effect of her ballast. The results of form stability are noticeable at relatively small angles of heel, while the righting effect of a ballast keel is at its greatest when the boat is on her beam ends. For a yacht to be properly seaworthy, her stability must stem from a healthy combination of the two. When a yacht heels, her centre of buoyancy shifts to leeward as more of her volume is immersed on the downwind side. Her centre of gravity (G), however, stays more or less where it was. This means that as her ballast is pressing down, the buoyancy is pushing up. Both are trying to return the boat to an even keel, and an equilibrium is reached with the sails, which are attempting to do the opposite.
The length of the lever arm between the centre of gravity (G) and the moving centre of buoyancy (Z) varies with the angle of heel. It is known, logically enough, as GZ. A graph of the length of GZ (which, for a 10 metre yacht with good stability characteristics may rise to between 0.6 and 1 metre) against heel angle gives a useful indication of a boats range of stability in flat water. It demonstrates, amongst other things, the angle at which the value of GZ becomes negative, and at which the yachts stability vanishes. The graph below shows clearly that the moderate-shaped Contessa 32 remains positively stable until she is virtually inverted at almost 160. The flatfloored fin-and-spade profile yacht of similar waterline length becomes negatively stable if she is rolled to just under 120. Should she be knocked down to that angle, she will actually try to float upside down, because her centre of buoyancy will have passed on to the wrong side of her centre of gravity.
It is important to understand that while a boats range of positive stability provides a vital clue to her potential safety in heavy weather, it is by no means the whole story. Her actual ability to resist capsize depends directly upon her displacement. A big boat with the same range of positive stability as a small one will be more likely to remain upright in a given set of circumstances. Similarly, if two boats are the same length while one is of greater displacement than the other, she may well have greater resistance to capsize, even if her GZ curve were to prove less advantageous. So far, we have considered stability only in a static sense. We have looked at yachts in a flat sea and have measured performance in relation to a steadily increasing heeling force. The sea rarely delivers such ideal circumstances. The wind does not generally capsize 10 metre yachts. In nearly every case, it is the waves. A wave is a moving force. It arrives in the yachts vicinity and, especially if she is beam-on, it causes her to roll and rise, or be knocked down if that is what circumstances warrant. After a brief encounter, it continues on its way. If a yacht can generate enough short-term resistance to a waves efforts, her angle of vanishing stability is less likely to be put to the test than would otherwise be the case. Resistance of this type is offered by a yachts initial unwillingness to begin rolling, which is determined, amongst other things, by her roll moment of inertia. How effective this is depends upon her weight and its distribution. It is, for example, ironic that if she has a heavy mast, the force needed to start her rolling is greater than for a light-weight equivalent. Yet a massive metal spar would have an entirely negative effect upon the yachts GZ curve. A wooden one has buoyancy characteristics of its own which cannot be discounted should it hit the water, and so on. A dismasted vessel has a far worse roll moment of inertia than an intact one. Ask anyone who has lost his stick in rough water. The sparless yachts range of positive stability as plotted on a GZ curve will appear greater than before, yet she is undoubtedly less seaworthy. From these comments about masts alone, it will be obvious that however important the dynamics of capsize may be (and in the USA they are considered extremely important), they are difficult, expensive, and often unreliable to assess empirically. It has also been said with some justification that a big enough breaking wave will knock down any boat afloat. A GZ curve is an excellent starting-point for making an assessment of a yachts likely performance in potentially capsizing conditions, but it is never more than that. This is why some traditional working craft have such a remarkable record for seaworthiness, despite unimpressive static stability predictions. If you anticipate ever being at sea in really bad weather, your assessment of a boats chances if she meets a big breaking wave beam-on will affect
your choice of survival options deeply. It is therefore important that any serious seafarer studies this matter as fully as he may. There are a number of excellent books specialising in the topic. It is wise to read and consider at least one of them. In the final analysis, however, the experienced, unprejudiced seaman can tell a great deal by the way a yacht looks and feels. There are few surprises lying in wait for the sailor with sensitive gut reactions. Recreational Craft Directive The European Recreational Craft Directive (RCD) sets out standards for, amongst other things, ranges of operation for yachts. While these may be superficially helpful, like all specific rules dealing with imprecise subjects the results sometimes leave much to be desired. Boats are being categorised as ocean-worthy that no sane skipper would take across the North Atlantic north of 40 degrees. As in all seafaring, the final decision must be down to the skipper. If you dont like the feel of a boat which the paperwork says is up to the job, trust your judgement. Its your crew who are on the line, not some bureaucrat sitting in a nice warm office.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1. The Skipper 2. The Theory of Sailing Sails Basic sail trim Running Close-hauled sailing Sailing to windward 3. Efficient Sailing Shaping the headsail Shaping the mainsail Sail combinations Hull balance Shortening sail Cruising chutes 4. Basic Seamanship under Sail Tacking Gybing Poling out a genoa Painless sail reduction Heaving to Reefing Single-line reefing Headsail changes 5. Boat Handling under Sail No brakes Wind awareness Tide awareness Sailing slowly Mooring under sail Leaving a mooring Anchoring Berthing 6. Boat Handling under Power Pivoting Blowing off Rudder effect Propeller effects Moving ahead The set piece short turn Berthing Coming alongside Leaving an alongside berth 7. Ropes and Ropework Types of rope Wire halyards Knots, splices and whippings Eyes and ends Rope handling Tying up Coming alongside Towing 8. Anchoring Holding ground Types of anchor Types of cable Weighting the cable Selecting an anchorage Laying an anchor Weighing anchor Fouled anchors Anchoring stern- or bow-to Kedging off Storm anchoring 9. Yacht Engines Basic maintenance Trouble shooting Fuel problems 10. Sailing in Heavy Weather Preparing the boat Sails Steering in waves
Survival tactics 11. Navigation: an Introduction 12. Charts, Publications, and Chart Table Tools Latitude, longitude and the globe Chart projections Direction Scale and passage requirements Charts required for a passage Chart symbols Soundings and contours Other information on the chart Chart datums Yachting charts Electronic charts Chart corrections The Nautical Almanac Pilot books and sailing directions Other publications Chart table tools 13. Aids to Navigation Lighthouses Offshore marks Inshore marks 14. Tidal Heights Tide tables Secondary ports Tidal definitions Intermediate tidal heights Electronic chart plotters The Rule of Twelfths Tidal curves Non-astronomical factors in tide movements The essence of a tidal height question Tidal height computers Using tidal height calculations safely 15. Tidal Streams Tidal gates Deep and shoal water Tide-induced sea states Information on tidal streams Personal observation 16. Traditional Navigational Inputs The compass Variation Deviation Heeling error Local magnetic anomalies Compass dip The log Depth The echo sounder 17. The Estimated Position Leeway The tide vector The echo sounder Plotting The log book 28. Classical Position Fixing The eyeball fix and the position line Sources of position line Preplotting and use of ships heading The running fix Evaluation of fixes 19. GPS and Radar Global Positioning System (GPS) Chart datums Beyond the fix Electronic chart plotters Marine computers Radar 20. Course Shaping Course to steer at the turn of the tide The longer passage Leeway Course shaping with a plotter 21. Navigational Strategy
Wind, tide, light and darkness Wind shifts Beating in water free of currents The favoured tack Unpredicted wind shifts Anticipated wind shifts Beating in a cross-current Beating in a cross-tide Tacking downwind VMG 22. Passage Planning Charts and overall distances Pilot books Alternative destinations Waypoints Waypoint lists Sailplans (routes) Weather Tidal streams Off-lying dangers Tidal heights Daylight Fuel Courses to steer Tactics and strategy Pilotage plan 23. Pilotage Safe track Piloting with a plotter Instant position lines Forward planning 24. Passage Navigation The passage plan The passage without electronics The same passage using GPS and a paper chart The passage with a plotter 25. Domestics of a Passage Food Sleep Warmth Space Seasickness 26. Fog Maintain your plot Fog seamanship Fog tactics 27. Tactics and Navigation in Heavy Weather Navigation in poor conditions Position fixing Course steered and estimated position 28. Damage Control Tool kits and spare parts Fire prevention and fighting Jury rigs Ropes around the propeller Steering failure Dismasting 29. Emergencies Lifeboat rescue Helicopter rescue First on the scene Taking to the liferaft Pyrotechnics 30. Man Overboard The reach-turn-reach Crash stop Bringing the casualty aboard Search and rescue 31. Weather The frontal depression Mutually exclusive air masses Air circulation Depression formation Depression tracks Frontal anatomy Occlusions
Secondary depressions Locating a low pressure centre Wind strengths in depressions Cyclonic winds Depressions in the southern hemisphere High pressure The squeeze Fog Sea breezes Appendix. Stability in Sailing Yachts The G2 curve