Sorry Franklin..
Another great quote by Franklin:"If both of these assumptions are correct, then you are saying that your senses are more effective in fog then radar and GPS. Since you are the fog expert, I guess that means that GPS and radar is worthless. Those of us that have these, we should throw them away because they aren't needed because our ears, eyes and noises are our best tools. Just think of all the weigth aloft we will save by throwing them away. Just think of all the battery juice we will save. Tomorrow I'll go around the marina and leave notes on each boat that has a GPS and/or radar, telling them that I will gladly help them uninstall their systems and dispose of it for them for a small fee because a very experienced sailor in Maine has discovered that they are worthless. Since just about every boat here has at least one of these systems, I guess I'll be very busy for a while."Great more assumptions!Need I say more? No! But I will cause I'm having fun.... Sorry guys!Franklin please stop!It's as bad & embarrassing as watching a comedian tell a bad joke on stage in front of a huge audience. The dead silence after your posts uncomfortable!Please, please, please, for your own sake, quit now I'm beginning to feel sorry for you...In case you missed the wording in my very first post on this thread, or if you did not understand it, here it is again. What I said:"While I use GPS/radar a lot these days I do not rely on it 100% for my fog navigation and rely on it as a nice quick "check & balance" for my other plotting skills."In general terms it means I DO use my radar and my GPS, and I should have added my autopilot too but I forgot about it. All it means is that I am NOT 100% dependent on my electronics,no one should be, and if I HAD to I could get by without either GPS or radar. The statement "rely on it as a nice quick "check & balance"" means I am using these tools but not putting 100% of my reliance or dependancy on those tools and those tools only. Seems simple to understand to me! You? My radar and GPS ARE ON 100% of the time when there is fog period end of story. The original question was pertaining to a boat with NO radar and the question was what would you do? Franklin, you turned this into a radar debate because I personally, as in what is important to me, put radar below my plotting skills and senses but above my GPS. Doesn’t this all sound a little foolish considering I prefaced every point I made with “this is what works for me in my home waters”. I don't get your anger directed at me? That is why I did not back down after your attack. Could I have risen above your petty child like attitude? Sure! But I do have valuable experiences to share with others and there were some misunderstandings about what to do in the fog that I wanted to try and help with like binoculars or spot lights or blaring music. I guess I took a wrong turn at stating what has worked for me for 30+ years and it went against what you believe as Franklin’s “Fog Bill of Rights”. I came into this discussion to try and help and you came at me like a pit bull on a steak for using the wrong terminology. I admitted I was wrong about that, even though I had done if for a specific reason, which perhaps I should not have. You then attacked me about how I navigate in the fog. I'm sorry my techniques are not the ones you find most valuable but as I stated for "me" this is what works. I was not trying to imply to anyone, and as far as I know no one else read it that way, that this is my way or the high way. I was merely trying to add the fact that senses do work in the fog, even if you’re a non-believer, and to open people up to giving it a try along side plotting skills, radar, & GPS. For you to twist, which is what you have done, my words, is very telling. My words are still there for everyone to read in black & white. I hope for your sake you did not spend all day yesterday coming up with that “quoted” response above.. Perhaps using your free, built in, senses is too much, too soon, for newbies but it does not mean they can't start practicing the art of it along side other strategies like ded/dead reckoning, GPS & radar. For you to paint with such a broad brush about using senses in the fog is WAY, WAY, WAY over the top & inappropriate in a forum where folks are trying to absorb and learn some, perhaps, new techniques. I am not the only one on the planet who uses his or her senses, in addition to other tools, to navigate in the fog. Do you think the folks in some of the foggiest locals like Newfoundland, Labrador, Nova Scotia or Maine rely entirely on electronics and don’t use their senses? Not anywhere in any of your posts, except for one reference to a compass, do you mention anything other than GPS or Radar or VHF. I did not misquote you yesterday because there were no quotations. I deduced and assumed, perhaps incorrectly, that you only rely on electronics. Based on your responses it’s all I had to work with. Sorry. To say that Radar and GPS are 100 times better than ripples, wind and general senses to someone who has actually had to navigate, a good number of times, in the fog with virtually no tools is also way off base and offensive. Yes GPS and radar are far more accurate, when working, than my senses and I never, ever disputed that fact or said otherwise. You were the only one creating that myth about me believing my senses were better and more accurate than my radar and I selfishly let you dig your own grave because I was amused by it. I’ll say it again my words are there in black and white. Read them. The reason I rank my senses as so important to “me” is because it’s how I first learned to work in the fog. They also don’t konk out on me, unless I have a heart attack at the helm, and my electronics can and have konked out many times.When I was 16 my grand father and I were sailing back from the Isles of Shoals in NH when we were over come by thick fog. I was at he helm and when my grandfather went to adjust the jib sheet he tripped and took out the compass with the winch handle. The fluid went everywhere and the compass was toast! Now this was a long time ago and we were, admittedly, ill prepared with only one compass, now broken, a chart, watch, the rough knowledge of the tides position and our senses. To make a long story short we made it back, sans compass, steering to the suns faint glare through the fog, ripples, wind, lobster buoys and the boats we already knew by sound and route like the deep sea fishing boats coming and going "on schedule" from Rye Harbor. With 80 feet of vis we managed to sail the 6+ miles and land darn close to our mooring. Would that catastrophe happen today? Most likely not because I now carry four compasses, three GPS's and all the other gear necessary, with back ups, because "I learned form my experience" and no not all my fog passages in 30 years have been pleasant like you so wrongly assumed. To attempt to discredit my experience and relate it to your less than a hand full of fog trips is absurd, rude and inconsiderate to others on this forums who perhaps may have learned something from my post. Yes I've learned a lot in my years about fog and I'm sorry you can't accept that anyone other than yourself knows anything about it too & that any other viewpoint, even one based on experience, is “knuckle headed”.In all your attacks you never once disputed my other five salient points about fog navigation that I made in my first post yet you set the tone for the entire thread and took it down a bumpy dirt road. Perhaps because of your pit bull style some of those points got lost in the fog and no one benefited from them.I've been here a long time and if you search my posts you’ll see that I try and help people when ever I can and I read & learn a lot more than I post. When I have specific experience either pro or con it is only then that I will chime in.