Want to see if I understand something
Hello,Perhaps I'm missing something.Are you old salts, (who can navigate by compass, knot log, and chronometer) writing that you can navigate from a known position, to a spot some distance away (lets make it something small like 2 nm), by COMPASS alone (no GPS, no visual confirmation), and arrive within 20' of your destination?If so, my hat is off to you, and you must be one of the best navigators on the planet. You can compensate for tides, currents, wind, waves, leeway, and still steer accurately enough to arrive within 20' of your desired destination? That is simply amazing. Or, when you get close enough, you start sounding with your lead line and tallow, examining the bits of bottom you bring up, to see where you really are. If I did the math correctly, a 1 degree difference in course would put you about 70 yards off course at the end of 2 nm. In my case, without constant feedback (either a visual reference mark or GPS assisted) I find it difficult to stay within 10 degrees of where I *think* I want to go, and that doesn't include outside factors like waves, tide, wind, etc.For me personally, even with a GPS, if I had to be within 20' of somewhere, and I can't see it with my own eyeballs, I'm staying away until I can, or I give up and go somewhere else. I like to sail at night. With GPS I know where the NAVAIDS are, I like to get close to confirm that I'm where I think I am, but not so close that I hit them (that would be embarrassing). Depending on how dark it is, I can be 50 yards away from a buoy, and still not see it. If I were closer than that to a real hazard, and could not see it, that would make me real uncomfortable.You guys are definitely better sailors than I am.Barry