Monday 02/14/2011 Question ANSWERED
Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 7:09 am
Safety Tip:
Sailing at night.
Have you ever sailed at night? If you've never been out after dark in your boat I recommend you give it a try. However I also highly recommend you stay in extremely well know waters until you are comfortable with the dark. Entering a harbor at night is very difficult even under good conditions. The shore lights blend and hide any navigational lights you might have to navigate by. Always know exactly where you are and where your markers are! run slow and extremely aware. Lights on the water might be mistaken for shore lights. Shore lights can easily be mistaken for nav lights! Always use ALL navigational assistance you can! GPS, radar if you have it and charts all help! One evening we were headed to Oak harbor. Oak Harbor is a particularly challenging enterance at day let alone night. You enter a busy harbor follwing a channel that shallows at low tide to 4 feet. Then it narrows dramatically and makes a complete dogleg 90 degrees to starboard around a peninsula! Lots of bouys to follow. Even though the bay is wide, the dogleg is a blind corner and the channel is narrow! We've been there many times at day and at night so to us it was just another night enterance. As we made our way in the first leg all was good. We were mid channel and ready for the right hand turn following the markers. Our night vision was keen and we were watching for other boats. As we came around the peninsula to turn right we were greated by many more lights than I've ever seen on the water! WOW! What we saw was immediately apperant however it ruined our ability to navigate! I was suddenly on GPS and radar because of all the distracting lights! We could no longer make out a boat, bouy, or any other object on the water! I was very amazed at the spectical! It was cool. However it left me very dis concerted. Yikes. We went from complete ability to see to 100% full crew distraction in seconds. We were literally no longer on our best but instead completely distracted! I was aware but it was very difficult to focus on the task at hand of getting safely anchored! I missed the chance for a fabulous night photograph. THAT in itself should tell you how ruffled I was! LOL! However the next day I remember the camera and snapped this shot.

Happy National Ferris Wheel Day!!
Question:
Are binoculars usefull on a boat at night?
Please explain your answer.
Sailing at night.
Have you ever sailed at night? If you've never been out after dark in your boat I recommend you give it a try. However I also highly recommend you stay in extremely well know waters until you are comfortable with the dark. Entering a harbor at night is very difficult even under good conditions. The shore lights blend and hide any navigational lights you might have to navigate by. Always know exactly where you are and where your markers are! run slow and extremely aware. Lights on the water might be mistaken for shore lights. Shore lights can easily be mistaken for nav lights! Always use ALL navigational assistance you can! GPS, radar if you have it and charts all help! One evening we were headed to Oak harbor. Oak Harbor is a particularly challenging enterance at day let alone night. You enter a busy harbor follwing a channel that shallows at low tide to 4 feet. Then it narrows dramatically and makes a complete dogleg 90 degrees to starboard around a peninsula! Lots of bouys to follow. Even though the bay is wide, the dogleg is a blind corner and the channel is narrow! We've been there many times at day and at night so to us it was just another night enterance. As we made our way in the first leg all was good. We were mid channel and ready for the right hand turn following the markers. Our night vision was keen and we were watching for other boats. As we came around the peninsula to turn right we were greated by many more lights than I've ever seen on the water! WOW! What we saw was immediately apperant however it ruined our ability to navigate! I was suddenly on GPS and radar because of all the distracting lights! We could no longer make out a boat, bouy, or any other object on the water! I was very amazed at the spectical! It was cool. However it left me very dis concerted. Yikes. We went from complete ability to see to 100% full crew distraction in seconds. We were literally no longer on our best but instead completely distracted! I was aware but it was very difficult to focus on the task at hand of getting safely anchored! I missed the chance for a fabulous night photograph. THAT in itself should tell you how ruffled I was! LOL! However the next day I remember the camera and snapped this shot.
Happy National Ferris Wheel Day!!
Question:
Are binoculars usefull on a boat at night?
Please explain your answer.