Yes you take it easy but you should do that when travelling at night My main go to grounds for night fishing was in between two reefs and rather large and dried at low tides in places and once around these heading back to port was another reef in a direct line of travel back. Lucky to have three light houses you could just pick which gave me something to triangulate off. Certainly places you would stay away from at night as you always had to have the ability to get back to port if required during the night.
Having the charts and the good book (variations, current etc) to calculate your heading was a must and the most important thing of all was your compass. I always had very good quality compass and I would swing it in the harbor and keep records as you are playing with your life and those on board. Was building vessels under surveyor back then and before we could hand the boat over and get final sign off the compass needed to be calibrated. Back then this was done with a person that was certified and most times was a harbor pilot. After many trips doing this and the gents explaining the tricks I was doing my own boat. It can be surprising just how much your compass can be out as you would know from your back ground.
Years ago when we were young we did do some crazy shit just to get out for a over night red trip. One rule we did try to keep too was always two boats but sometime even that was disregarded. Down this way that is never a problem as there will be 20 boats next to you.
As to the Swains Scott, I don't think I would even do that with GPS at night
Give a man a fish & he will eat for a day !
Teach him how to fish
& he will sit in a boat - & drink beer all day!
TEAM MOJIKO
Dignity your not a spring chicken either and may have the same trust in electronics and telecommunications as I do. Don't get me wrong as I am right into all this technology but struggle at times understanding it or keeping up with it.
Boating is much safer now with it but when all fails I wonder what most people would do. If your in daylight and can see land and know your area pretty good chance you can get yourself home with out issues. What concerns me is that people are travelling much further out into the big blue with no idea what to do if the technology fails and it does.
I don't go anywhere out to sea unless I am confident I can get back without GPS and all the other gizmos. I have never had a compass and chart fail
My adult Son fishes with me a lot and at present fish coastal until the big boat is back in service. Makes me laugh with some of the apps he has on the phone for fishing. One is for fish ID, he scans the fish and it comes back with the fish ID. Not always correct with the response but he believes it. Had many a argument in the boat over this until we get home and pull the Grants book out to prove it wrong. EPIRB's in my book are the best advance made in my boating life.
I feel we put to much trust into technology at sea and land for that matter. Boating/fishing use to be relaxing once, fuel the boat, get some bait, make sure the battery would start the motor and off you went. Now we worry about transducer placement and how many head units we can install in the boat and will we have phone service. Funny I do the same shit now also
I am probably off track for this thread. Sorry
Give a man a fish & he will eat for a day !
Teach him how to fish
& he will sit in a boat - & drink beer all day!
TEAM MOJIKO
The bloke I first started reef fishing with up here 20 years back was too cheap to buy a GPS so he would just use landmarks, compass and sonar to find the reefs up to 50-60kms out...all worked pretty good except one time in poor visibility and rain coming home he ended up about 20 km's north by the time we reached the coast on the return trip..
We used to take his boat one trip and mine the next..I only had one of those early GPS units that had no maps so when going from mark to mark we had a couple of hairy moments of nearly hitting reefs and rocks in between..
Another time I was heading to the reef in pissing down down rain and fog ..crossing the shipping channel I vaguely made out a shape to one side and then another on the other side...i hit the stops before I realized it was Tug towing a barge and I had almost hit the cable between them at 25 knots...about the only time that I thought radar would be really handy..
Nowadays we just use 2 combo units and the bathymaps app as a backup on the phone..
Cant really see a situation where those things and a chart and compass wont get you out of trouble...
My biggest concern is being hit by another boat (probably a pro boat on autopilot) at night while I'm sleeping...though I'd say its a lot less busy up here then down your way..we are lucky to see one or 2 other white lights on the whole ocean at night out wide up here...
pppppppppppppppp
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Interesting info
A bad days fishing has got to be better than any day at work......
If you get the right model it will have a proper GPS chip. Then it's just a case of downloading the right maps prior to departure so you don't need signal. You can get a wifi device that wires into your GPS via nmea0183 as well - just need to confirm it will work with your chosen software.
I didn't know that you could get them with a built in GPS. Hard to keep up with all the gizmos.
That would certainly get you out of trouble if you had a electronics melt down. I do carry a old hand held GPS in the boat which combined with charts and compass would see me out of trouble.
Come to think about it, most of the smart watches have built in GPS that also can be used for position.