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Cleone - CLEONE Leg 17 Day 12 - Navigation



Pencil and Paper vs Bits, Bytes and a Glass Screen.
 
The Skipper makes a lot of fuss about navigation, and seems to spend hours at it.  He makes a fetish of the tedious chore of  filling in the Ship's Log.  Every hour; Cleone's position is written down (to one place of decimals, even though the GPS gives it to 3), the time is recorded (preferably exactly on the hour, but anyway to the minute), the distance run and how far to go are noted, and even the wind strenth and direction are written down.  That's not all; every twelve hours (Noon and Midnight, Greenwich Mean Time), and when near land more often, the position and time are marked with a pencil cross on one or more of the charts.  These charts - seagoing maps, of which there are well over a hundred on board - are expensive pieces of paper.  They are largely white, except at the edges where they become blue, sometimes green, and then yellow; the coloured bits are land or rocks or shallow waters, and normally to be avoided.  The rest merely shows huge areas of sea.  The whole thing seems to be a pointless exercise, and indeed some yachts neither carry paper charts nor keep a written log.  A dot on a screen shows where they are, another allows them to plan their course and insert way-points into their plotters, which their auto-pilot will then follow.  Their position at any given time is merely recorded within their instruments.  For us, before we depart from any port, the Skipper draws lines on a chart, extracts waypoints and feeds them into the GPS by hand, making a traditional Passage Plan.  Sounds simple, but it is time consuming and these days it is surely un-necessary.  We know where we came from and where we are going to, it is stored in the GPS with our exact position.  Apart from satisfying the Boss's fetish, is there a point to all of this old technology rigmarole?
 
Even to the untrained eye, examination of a chart reveals that it contains a wealth of detail.  As well as soundings and undersea contours, everything of navigational significance is marked on it; lighthouses, buoys, harbours, rocks, shoals, shipping lanes, currents and so on.  The accuracy, particularly of Admiralty Charts, is legendary, and there is a superb system of Notices to Mariners that can be used to keep them up-to-date.  Some of our charts were originally produced in the 19th Century; they are still the latest editions available.  Even though they are only printed in black and white, and depths are marked in fathoms, the detail is sill accurate, and official corrections keep them current.  And where there are inaccuracies, such as the use of an obsolete datum, the extent of these (and a wealth of other important detail) is clearly printed below the chart's Title.  The spread of an Admiralty Chart is much greater than that of a Chart Plotter screen - even Kealoha's is not that big - so Passage Planning, and picking up drift and other trends is much easier, and gross errors of plotting or course steered leap out at you.  All these details are doubtless recorded on the chip of the Chart Plotter's Memory Card.  Finding them is another matter; how often are they referred to and how easy are they to access?
 
It is a legal requirement to keep a log, which can be sought by any authority.  Our Log has been; when the incompetent Panama Agent failed to give us our Zarpe (clearance form) the Ecuador Authorities demanded copies of our Log Book as proof that we had actually come from Panama.  As to the rest of it, maybe we have got to the stage where we don't need to worry about weather trends; after all, Bruce's weather forecast e-mails are ever there in our computers ready to be re-referred to.  Our instruments tell us how we are being affected by any current that's around, and what the wind is doing for the matter of that.  And maybe if any dispute arises, the bits and bytes in our instruments can be extracted and events construed from them that can be used in evidence for or against us.    
 
But putting aside any legal requirements, there is something tangible about the written record, and it is there for ever.  It is easy for anyone to refer back to events in the log or to positions on a chart, and immensely satisfying to see the little crosses joined by a pencil line marching across the ocean or winding through some tricky rock-strewn passage.  And in the event of electrical failure - all too common - or a lightning strike (less common, but not unheard of) leaving us instrumentless, the paper, with all its important details and our added markings will still be there, the working of the pencil and plotter will be unaffected and the weather forecast recorded.  We will know roughly where we are, and accurately where we have been.  With good luck and the aid of a compass (and as a last resort, a sextant and tables) we should continue to be able to know where we are and where we should be going.  And the chart with its marks will be a permanent reminder of happy, exciting days spent at sea.
 
The case rests.  I'd like to think I am no luddite, but don't throw the pencil and paper away just yet.
 
All well with us, and best wishes to everyone,
 
James, Norfy (Chris) and Alex
Yacht Cleone
19o08'S 064o44'E



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