Good for you!
Keep trying WJ, compass bearings and plotting can be very tricky.I was a flight instructor for three looong years, and a lot of students had a hard time figuring this out. Even today, I'm surprised at how many new First Officers I fly with that can't work with a Mag compass.Just from what I've read here, let's see if I've gotten things right: the point you're trying to take a fix on was bearing (sitting, relative to you) 190 degrees, or, as you would look at it, a little to the "right" of south. That would mean, if you faced towards where your compass indicated north, the point would be behind your left shoulder. If you were to turn counterclockwise, until you were facing that point, the compass card (the numbers inside the compass) would slowly swing clockwise, until the lubber line across the glass indicated 190 degrees.Here comes the tricky part, sometimes you line up the compass on this point, and the lubber line reads 320. Now, if you imagine north, east south and west as 12, 3, 6 and 9 o'clock, when you face north, or 12, your point should lie close to 7 o'clock. If it doesn't, and it seems closer to 10, then I would guess that YOUR position has changed, and you've drifted towards the south. As you've drifted south, the point you're working with has slowly shifted clockwise through your 9 o'clock, until it's laying off your 10 o'clock position.If you use Dave's suggestion, and draw a line on a chart from that point, at an angle of 150 degrees (the opposite of 320), your position lies somewhere along that radial. To figure out where you are on that radial, you need to take a bearing off another, charted landmark, something big enough that you can easily see it, and it appears on your chart. Point the compass at it, and note the bearing. Let's say it bears 025 degrees, or between 1 and 2 o'clock. Draw another line from that landmark sloping left at 205 degrees. Where the two radials cross, is a rough indication of where you lie in the bay. To triangulate, and confirm your position, as Dave has said, take a bearing off a third landmark, and draw a radial. If the three radials form a small triangle, you've got a pretty good fix. If they all cross at one point, you should run out and play the lottery!GPS is a wonderful thing... Until it don't work. Your mag compass is inaccurate, labor intensive, and archaic, but when the batteries go dead, or the chip fries in the GPS, it'll still work as well as when sailors put their faith in it hundreds of years ago.