The 'pedantic' answer is sail on the tack which provides the best VMG. How long do you stay on that tack? ..... time on each of the TWO tacks is the ratio of Trigonometric Cosine of the sailing angle of the first leg to the Trigonometric Cosine of the sailing angle of the second leg ... for not one inch of extra distance sailed.
Calc.: Trig. Cos. of sailing angle of port tack divided by Trig. Cos. of sailing angle of starboard tack ... 'times' .... total estimated elapsed time. .... and where the 'hypotenuse' is boat speed.
If you have integrated GPS with 'windmachine', this can be plotted 'automatically'.
The pragmatic and 'reality' approach would be to tack on the inevitable windshifts that continually give you best VMG as you go up and in 'reasonable' close proximity to the rhumb line. This is how long distance sailors lacking fully integrated instruments do it.
Simple speak: dont sail off in the wrong or least efficient direction/tack; always tack on the advantageous windshift. Dont sail too far (in miles) from the rhumb line in case you encounter an unexpected 'permanent' wind shift.
;-)
Thanks, Rich. Yes, pedantic it may be, but it's also utterly meaningless! It's a tautology - you're saying the angle is the angle, and it doesn't provide any guidance or insight into what one should do: what angle, how long on each tack, etc. I know enough about this to know that the performance of the boat on different points of sail make a difference; so without referring to the polar chart it's rather meaningless. I also know that it's generally a good idea to not stray too far from the rhumb line, though one piece I didn't mention is that this course is to the buoy to the North of Block, and I'll be turning South by Southwest after that, to get into New Harbor, so it would be good to leave that, the endpoint, to port. If I tacked onto a starboard tack and then continued past the buoy, that would be fine.
Watching the shifts is good advice, but this is expected to blow steady from the SW all day long. On average - SW.
p.s. I don't have a gauge that displays VMG, and my chart plotter doesn't either.