Monday, March 11, 2013

When Your Chart Plotter Fails, Part 1 of 2

New Bern, NC

Are your piloting skills up to snuff? Have you become overly dependent on your GPS chart plotter? Those gadgets are so seductive, that it is hard to imagine being without them. Here are some common sense tips to avoid getting caught short.

Backups: We use a Lowrance chart plotter as my primary navigation device. I also have an Android smart phone with GPS and Navionics Chart Plotter software. I also kept my old smart phone that no longer receives cell phone signals, but the GPS and its chart plotter app still work. My wife’s iPad also has a GPS navigation app. In our ditch kit, we carry a Garmin 76 hand-held GPS, plus spare batteries. Five independent GPS units should be enough to assure that we never lose GPS function; right? Wrong; there are several ways to lose all backup GPS’ at once and some tips for what to do about it.

Lightning: In 2006 we were struck by lightning. It did a lot of predictable damage, but I was shocked to see that even some hand-held devices were fried by the EMP (electro-magnetic pulse). You could lose every single electronic device on board in a flash. The defense is to store electronic devices not in active use in a Faraday cage. The oven in your galley stove is a good place. Don’t do what I did though. I once forgot about the laptop and turned the oven on, resulting in laptop fondue. I also use cookie tins. They make good Faraday cages and come in many shapes and sizes.

Degredation: From 2005-2010 I used the anchor dragging alarm on our Lowrance chart plotter almost every night. But since then, hardly a night goes by without a false alarm. I learned that because of some launch failures and some budget problems, we have fewer than the full compliment of GPS satellites in the sky. They can’t cover every point in the globe every minute of the day. The practical effect is that my GPS sometimes calculates a position wrong by 300 feet or more, and that the error may persist for minutes before it snaps back. I’m told that the problem will get worse before it gets better again in future years. The more modern and the more expensive your GPS unit, the less vulnerable it is to degradation.

Malice: You may have heard that GPS signals can be easily jammed in a local area. You may even know that GPS signals can be spoofed giving inaccurate positions. It’s worse than that. Recent research shows that it is possible to attack GPS units via RF signals in ways that exploit bugs in particular makes and models. For example, there could be attacks specific to Garmin, or Raymarine, or any other brand. It is analogous to evil web sites that exploit bugs in the web browsers and the underlying operating system. We all know how unsuccessful all manufacturers of software have been in eliminating vulnerabilities. GPS units are no different. Still worse, hackers are closing in on ways to attack WAAS ground stations, and even the satellite uplink stations that support GPS. Also, need I mention cyberwar? The bottom line is that regional or even global GPS outages are not unthinkable in the near future.

But the prudent skipper doesn’t need a reason to plan for credible failures. So here are some ways to do that.

Always have paper charts for your cruising grounds on hand. Keep track of your current position on the chart or in your log. On the ICW, my wife notes the passage of every day marker, and moves a place marker on the chart to record that position.

On the ICW in normal daylight, you can always see the next day marker. You don’t need instruments at all as long as you keep your eye on the paper charts. If it is dark or foggy, drop your hook and wait. With our without GPS, it is too dangerous to navigate the ICW if you can’t

If you are inshore, or near shore where you can get a cell phone signal, your mobile devices will give a fair position estimate even without GPS. If you don’t have chart plotter software on your mobile device, you can still get raw lat/lon data. Google Maps or Apple maps will give you a pretty useful picture of your current position even without GPS. If you are near shore, learn to plot a bearing and distance to the nearest harbor entrance.

My phone tells me the time on shore, and the GPS tells me the time on board the boat, so who needs a watch any more? But in case of loss of GPS, an accurate watch becomes a critical part of your backup equipment. Carry one in the cookie tin.

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Whoops

New Bern, NC

I was trimming my beard last night when I made a slight slip. Whoops!  The result was a disaster that could only be fixed by shaving it all off.  Therefore, here is my new look.


This is the 3rd or 4th time in the past 8 years that I grew a beard and shaved it (regular readers of this blog can verify that count.)  My reason for growing a beard is that I don't like shaving.  My reason for shaving it off is that it can be scratchy. I have so little personal vanity that I almost never glance at a mirror to notice how bad I look.  So be it.

So, the next question is should I grow a new beard?   I added a poll widget with that question.  You should see it in the upper right corner of this page.  It will stay open until 3/17/2013.  Weigh in.



Friday, March 08, 2013

8 Years and Counting

 New Bern, NC

Eight years ago today, we took possession of Tarwathie and started our cruising life.   We continue to believe that was one of the best life decisions we ever made.  We can't imagine being any happier with any other form of retired life.  So, what are our major observations and lessons learned after 8 years?


  1. It took two years to really get into it.  We heard the same figure, two years, from other cruisers.  By the end of two years you really know, yes or no, this is the life for us.
  2. Our skills improved, peaked, then started declining as we became overly complacent, less scared, and thus less vigilant.  The decline is the reason behind this hiatus from year 7.5-8.5 in New Bern and on the road.   Safety is critical and it takes effort.
  3. Life as Nomads is in our blood as much as life on a boat.  We have perpetual travel lust.  A week in one place is enough; after that we get antsy.  That was evident even last week in the keys.  Libby was letting loose on pent-up wanderlust and she just wanted to go and to in every direction.

    The only exception to that is Marathon, where we are content to say for months before moving on. The summer of 2013 we'll be touring by car instead of by boat, but we'll be nomads anyhow.
  4. We are just as much attached to Tarwathie as our home as anyone is to their house.  The difference is that we take our home with us when we go.  If fortune should offer us a bigger, nicer, more affordable boat, I think chances are high that we would decline the offer.
  5. We have many cruising friends, but few full-time cruising friends. For the first 7.5 years, we were full-time cruisers.   We were away from the boat and sleeping on land less than one week per year.  Very few of our cruising friends are full-time cruisers.  They might cruise 75% of the year, but not 100%.  Many of them own cars and houses or slips.   Few of our friends average 5,000-6,000 nautical miles per year as we do.   To be sure, there are circumnavigators and cruisers who travel further and longer than we do, but none of them are in our inner circle of friends.
  6. We have every intention of continuing to cruise as long as our health permits.  I'm antsy already to sell our car in September because I see it as a life-style spoiler.


Advice for would-be cruisers?  Short and simple.

  • You must have good health.
  • You must have a solid marriage.
  • Wealth is not necessary.  Indeed, scaling down your life style brings much happiness.
  • Don't delay.  Do it ASAP.  Carpe Diem.  Tomorrow, the opportunity may be snatched away.

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

Back on the Boat At Last

New Bern, NC

It is cold and very windy here today.  Nevertheless, we're back and glad to be home again.  Tarwathie is home.  Tonight we get to sleep on our own bed once again.   It seems like a very long time we were away.  First, I got sick, then Libby got sick, then to recover we jumped in the car and headed for the Florida keys.

Our trip was a great success.  

  • On the way down, we stopped to visit with Jeff and Wendy in Labelle.  
  • Then we drove to Marathon in the keys to visit with Bob and Sandra.   
  • God it was nice.  It is so easy to forget how wonderful The Keys weather is in winter.  
  • Our coughs and congestion vanished as soon as we got to the keys.
  • While in Marathon we got to see lots of other cruising friends.
  • Bob and I took a side trip to Miami where I bought solar panels from Sun Electric.
  • After leaving the keys, we visited Everglades National Park.  (our coughs and congestion returned as soon as we hit the mainland()
  • We visited with Ray and Pat in Bradendon.   They are former cruisers.  Pat taught Libby to make pine needle baskets.
  • We visited with cruisers Chris and June.
  • We visited with Bo and Joyce on board Dream Catcher in Myrtle Beach.
  • We even found some world-class trees with very long pine needles along the side of the road.
  • Now, our coughs and congestion are much diminished once again, our skin is less white and our spirits are lifted.  That was a very welcome break.
Thank you everyone.  Now we are ready to plunge back in to projects and preparing for our summer travels.  Only 5 weeks left in New Bern.

p.s. I volunteered to teach a course on Excel at the New Bern Library.  Demand is high.   Three sessions are scheduled.   I love teaching, so it should be fun.






Sunday, March 03, 2013

Fun Fun Fun

Champions Gate Blvd, Florida

Boy, we have been so busy having fun that I didn't have time to blog.

Bob and Sandra on Carpe Diem showed us a wonderful time:

 

  • We had our lobster Reuben at Keys fisheries.
  • We had dinner o board Y-Knot with Darrick and Sharon.
  • Bob and I drove to Sun Electric in Miami where I bought two new solar panels.
  • Libby and Sandra taught four tables of cruising women about pine needle baskets. I was very happy that Libby had the opportunity to do that. She missed it.
On Friday we left Marathon to head north. Along the way we got to stop at Roberts Fruit Stand in Homestead, and to visit the Everglades National Park nearby.On Saturday we stopped to visit Pat and Ray in Bradenton.

  • They are former cruiser met years ago in the Great Dismal Swamp.
  • Also, while in the Bahamas, Pat taught Libby how to make pine needle baskets. We all know what that resulted in..
  • They took us to a local botanical garden which was great.
  • They even arranged for neighbors to come in and play Balderdash last night. We haven't played that in nearly a year.
Today we are heading north along rural roads in Florida's interior. We will stop. In Green Cove Springs to say hello to friends in a marina there. We haven't seen them in a while.Next stop, Myrtle Beach where we will visit Bo and Joyce on board their boat named (I forget)

Our only regret was that this trip missed Florida's East Coast. We would have liked to visit Dave & Jonnie, Charley & Mary, Dave & Pam too. Too bad, can't do everything.

Thanks so much to all our friends and hosts. We are privileged to have such great friends.