johnr":1nqzh212 said:We have a laminated placemat on the boat table..yes a placemat...that depicts the San Juan waters. I'm sure you're seen them at island restaurants. It's chart like. The standing joke is that we refer to that thing more often than anything else, and it's probably true!
johnr":3rn4e7w2 said:We have a laminated placemat on the boat table..yes a placemat...that depicts the San Juan waters. I'm sure you're seen them at island restaurants. It's chart like. The standing joke is that we refer to that thing more often than anything else, and it's probably true!
johnr":2jvqi5bo said:We have a laminated placemat on the boat table..yes a placemat...that depicts the San Juan waters. I'm sure you're seen them at island restaurants. It's chart like. The standing joke is that we refer to that thing more often than anything else, and it's probably true!
I do, and I love them. Not for navigation though, although that's nice, I use them to help me set traps for shrimp. Very handy!I would carry a set of......current maps and yearly tables. Such as: "Current Atlas: Juan de Fuca Strait to Strait of Georgia"
starcrafttom":106s0079 said:"Current Atlas: Juan de Fuca Strait to Strait of Georgia"
One of the best tools on a boat you can have in this area. I love my well worn copy. It has been a great help fishing and shrimping.
Now THAT is skill.thataway":52yr9ucp said:With a predicted log race, the skipper only has a compass, tachometer and chart. Often there are several "waypoints"--and the skipper has to predict when he will arrive at each waypoint as well as the finish point. The only clock aboard is a chronometer which is held by an "observer" who takes the time at check points and when the skipper crosses the "finish line". The best skippers can be within seconds on a 100 mile race. (Even with currents)
Lollygaggin":18nr6wx9 said:Now THAT is skill.thataway":18nr6wx9 said:With a predicted log race, the skipper only has a compass, tachometer and chart. Often there are several "waypoints"--and the skipper has to predict when he will arrive at each waypoint as well as the finish point. The only clock aboard is a chronometer which is held by an "observer" who takes the time at check points and when the skipper crosses the "finish line". The best skippers can be within seconds on a 100 mile race. (Even with currents)
I must express my extreme frustration with electronic "gadgets" at this point.
I have been trying for more than an hour to post a reply to Thataway's comment. I've lost my internet connection three times plus my brand new laptop turned itself off for no reason.
Granted, not everyone lives in an area with such unreliable satellite and internet coverage but, it just goes to prove, s**t happens. When the plotters fail or are inaccurate, those paper charts are a lifeline to safe harbours in adverse conditions.
At the risk of sounding opinionated, (or more like a jack ass), I'd pit my paper charts, depth sounder and stand alone radar skills against any all inclusive electronic navigation system in any rough weather and 0 visibility situation.
I was fortunate to have been brought up in an era and area where it was mandatory to one's survival to have paper charts and good DR navigation abilities. In the Gulf Islands I've witnessed the tides and currents alone, getting people in trouble.
These fairly new touch screens are fun to use and save a lot of precious space at the helm with the ability to combine multiple functions on one unit.
However, when the going gets rough, I find them hard to control, especially when pounding into close steep waves in high wind and limited visibility.
Granted, survival situations rarely present themselves if we use good boating practices consistently. But, for me, there have been two occasions in my 63 years of life where DR and paper chart skills saved us from having to call the coast guard for help or, worst yet, floundering.
Now the argument will be; Hey Chris, aren't your precious stand alone radar and depth sounder also electronic gadgets subject to the same moist environments (you hypocrite) ?
Yes, they are. But my tool kit includes wire and crimpers and spare fuses and I know where my power sources are. If everything fails and for some reason I can't jerry rig my "gadgets" back to life, my paper charts, DR skills, mechanical plotter, and dividers will guide me pretty much anywhere.
I apologise for such a long winded response.
This is an awesome thread, thanks for starting it![]()
I'd pit my paper charts, depth sounder and stand alone radar skills against any all inclusive electronic navigation system in any rough weather and 0 visibility situation.
Pat Anderson":s76xtv2e said:Most vessels of any kind in Canada have an obligation to carry and use official charts and publications and to keep them up to date. The chart carriage regulations are listed in the Canada Shipping Act, 2001 of the Charts and Nautical Publications Regulations, 1995.
CHS paper charts meet the requirements of the chart carriage regulations.
CHS digital charts meet the requirements of the chart carriage regulations under certain circumstances:
CHS Electronic Navigational Charts (ENCs) meet the requirements provided they are used with an Electronic Chart Display and Information System (ECDIS).
CHS Raster Navigational Charts (RNCs) meet the requirements only if paper charts are carried and used as a backup.
For further information on which charts meet the official requirements, please see our CHS Official Products and CHS Licensed Manufacturers.
NewMoon":19al03mh said:Pat Anderson":19al03mh said:Most vessels of any kind in Canada have an obligation to carry and use official charts and publications and to keep them up to date. The chart carriage regulations are listed in the Canada Shipping Act, 2001 of the Charts and Nautical Publications Regulations, 1995.
CHS paper charts meet the requirements of the chart carriage regulations.
CHS digital charts meet the requirements of the chart carriage regulations under certain circumstances:
CHS Electronic Navigational Charts (ENCs) meet the requirements provided they are used with an Electronic Chart Display and Information System (ECDIS).
CHS Raster Navigational Charts (RNCs) meet the requirements only if paper charts are carried and used as a backup.
For further information on which charts meet the official requirements, please see our CHS Official Products and CHS Licensed Manufacturers.
If I understand correctly, the ENCs mentioned above in subsection (1) of the regs must be on an officially approved ECDIS - not what most recreational boaters have. That may be what led to the impression that we must carry paper charts (which used to be true, if I understand correctly). But now it's not necessarily a problem. Here's subsection (2), which spells it out for us (provided we have available the information described below):
(2) The master and owner of a ship of less than 100 tons are not required to have on board the charts, documents and publications referred to in subsection (1) if the person in charge of navigation has sufficient knowledge of the following information, such that safe and efficient navigation in the area where the ship is to be navigated is not compromised:
(a) the location and character of charted
(i) shipping routes,
(ii) lights, buoys and marks, and
(iii) navigational hazards; and
(b) the prevailing navigational conditions, taking into account such factors as tides, currents, ice and weather patterns.