OK but..
Moon,Where you sail and I sail are at the opposite ends of the spectrum. Only Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick tend to see more fog than Maine, so for me, having an accurate a compass as possible removes that much more variability. If I sailed where you did I would probably not give as much though to compass calibration. Neither your home waters, nor my home waters, are representative of the entire country so the folks in between our extremes need to make their own choices. Again, as I stated, my compass that came on a BRAND NEW BOAT was off between 6 and 14 degrees right out of the box! Six to fourteen degrees is a LOT of error to start thinking about calculating out when that fog bank begins looming on the horizon and you have all those pesky little other things to do too like the man the stop watch, radar, fog horn, other boats & lobster buoys not even to mention adding or subtracting 6-14 degrees of known error to the mixI use a GPS plotter, and have been since about 1998, but I NEVER rely solely on one means of navigation equipment. That would be "stupid", at least where I sail...