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Sailing Courses Cover Right of Way Rules
If you want to learn sailing, you must be ready to take on a large degree of responsibility. Sailing is fun and there is nothing like the feeling on a sailboat when it's cruising free and easy.

 


DEAD RECKONING: A plot of courses steered and distances travelled through the water.
DEADHEAD: A log or heavy timber floating nearly vertical, with little of it's bulk showing above the surface.

Three Courses: - True Course “TC' - Magnetic Course “MC' - Corrected Compass “CC'
Through Hull - Where fittings pass through a hull below the waterline ...

A record of courses or operation. Also, a device to measure speed.
logbook
A boat's record of activity.

Course: Two courses have been established for the Louis Vuitton Cup. Although both courses are windward/leeward in orientation, they measure different lengths. Course A is the America's Cup course, a six-leg windward/leeward measuring 18.

To convert true courses and bearings into compass courses and bearings with variation westerly, allow it to the right of the true course or bearing, and with variation easterly allow it to the left of the true course or bearing.

Boating safety courses for your area.
Call: 1-800-336-BOAT

Buoy Identification, Aids to Navigation ...

Advanced Sailing Courses
These advanced sailing courses will be available either on an ad hoc basis or specially offered at the best times on our Key Lime Sailing Club events calendar.

Chart Table - A table designated as the area in the boat where the navigator will study charts and plot courses.
Charter - The renting of a boat
Chearly - An old expression meaning heartily or quickly.

It was the custom in sailing ships to record courses, distances and tacks on a log slate. The new watch would always use a clean slate if things were going fine, disregarding what had gone before and starting anew.

The principal entries are: courses steered; distance run; compass variations, sea and weather conditions; ship's position, principal headlands passed; names of lookouts, and any unusual position, principal headlands passed; names of lookouts, ...

Three sheets to the wind - On a three-masted ship, having the sheets of the three lower courses loose will result in the ship meandering aimlessly downwind. Also, a sailor who has drunk strong spirits beyond his capacity.

document, for it contains the following clause which is known as the Mutual Agreement Clause: " The club challenging for the cup and the club holding the same may by mutual consent make any arrangement satisfactory to both as to the dates, courses, ...

- P and S are sailing close-hauled upwind on converging courses. P must keep clear of S under Rule 10 (On Opposite Tacks). P begins to tack onto starboard directly in front of S.

on her foremast, and sometimes on her mainmast, but no courses. It is claimed that the schooner originated in America in 1713 in this way -- One Andrew Robinson (probably a Scotchman), built a vessel at Gloucester, Massachusetts, ...

To conduct a boat from one port to another, but more specifically to find the boat's position and determine courses.

Figure 3 may make some sense of the wording of Inland Rule 34(a)(i) as applied to vessels converging on near-parallel courses. First, the term "leave" can be understood to mean when one vessel starts to draw away from the path of another vessel.

Right-of-Way: A right-of-way boat has precedence over others on conflicting courses and has the right to maintain its course.
rip current -- as in tide rip; water disturbance created by conflicting current and wind ...

slab line - A rope used to brail up the foot of courses.
slab reefing - Also points reefing, and sometimes jiffy reefing.

Consider two ships on courses that intersect. The rule is that the ship on the left must give way. The stand on vessel sees the green light on the starboard (right) side of the ship on the left.

they mark an area where mariners are to be warned of dangers such as firing ranges, racing courses, seaplane bases, underwater structures or areas where no safe through channel exists and of traffic separations.
they are coloured yellow ...

The materials developed in the courses of instruction for "in-service" training at the Navy Yards, Mare Island, Philadelphia, and Boston, have been used in the preparation of this book.

The US Coast Guard Auxiliary, US Power Squadron, State Boating Commission and many Yacht clubs offer a courses in Boating Safety, Rules of the Road and Basic Navigation. It1s a fun course to take..

c. Consider one of the cram courses if you aren't a good, well disciplined studier and memorizer. They probably work well, but they're expensive and will probably require you to go somewhere away from home for a week or so.

LOG: A record of courses or operation. Also, a device to measure speed.
LUBBER'S LINE : A mark or permanent line on a compass indicating the direction forward; parallel to the keel when properly installed.

Timid Virgins Make Dull Company at Weddings (Or "Add Whiskey.") This is the formula for converting true directions or courses to compass readings: True plus Variation equals Magnetic heading.

Close-reefed topsails and courses.
10
Whole Gale
Or that with which she could scarcely bear close-reefed main-topsail and reefed fore-sail. 48 To 55 knots ...

Its major strengths lies on courses with aft winds and during gales and rough sea. But, it was impossible to sail so close-hauled to the wind as with other sail types.

T
top
Tack- To sail to windward by alternating courses, staying as close to the wind as possible. To zigzag into the wind.
Telltale- Any lightweight device attached to mast or shrouds to indicate apparent wind.

Books covering information about coastal navigation, including navigational aids, courses, distances, anchorages and harbors.
Coastal Navigation
Navigating near the coast, allowing one to find one's position by use of landmarks and other references.

How much can you learn? Are there advanced courses? Will the school help you continue sailing by recommending a club or supervised flotilla charters?

(a) When two power-driven vessels are meeting on reciprocal or nearly reciprocal courses so as to involve risk of collision each shall alter her course to starboard so that each shall pass on the port side of the other.

SWING THE BOAT-To rotate the vessel to check the compass on known courses.
TABERNACLE-A hinge at the base of a mast which allows the mast to be lowered easily.

DEAD RECKONING - A plot of courses steered and distances traveled through the water.
DECK - A permanent covering over a compartment, hull or any part of a ship serving as a floor.
DISPLACEMENT - The weight of water displaced by a floating vessel.

Buy a CD Version of the US SAILING Education Website !!! Contains seven boating courses and tests along with numerous illustrations, 14 calculators and over 75 videos.

A table designated as the area in the boat where the navigator will study charts and plot courses.
cheek block
A block with one end permanently attached to a surface.

Clean Slate:
It was the custom in sailing ships to record courses, distances and tacks on a log slate. The new watch would always start with a clean slate if things had been growing fine, disregarding what had gone before and starting anew.

Successful design in this area requires careful analysis of where the boat will be raced and the prevailing conditions and courses.

All boating safety course material has been developed in conjunction with the Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife, and is the same material used in their classroom courses. Take the official Delaware boating safety course.
In This Handbook ...

crew from falling overboard.
List: Inclination of a boat due to excess weight on one side or the other.
Lines: ropes used for various purposes aboard a boat.
Log: 1) A navigation instrument used to estimate a ship's speed. 2) A record of courses ...

Downwind: All courses further away from the wind than a beam reach
Draft: The depth of water that a boat draws
Drift: Strength of a tidal current ...

Course over ground (COG) - Term used to refer to the direction of the path over ground actually followed by a vessel [a misnomer in that courses are directions steered or intended through the water with respect to a reference meridian] ...

compass rose: two concentric circles, each divided into 360 degrees or 32 points, printed on nautical charts and used for laying off courses or bearings. The outer circle is graduated in degrees true, the inner circle is degrees magnetic.

Furthermore some training establsihment are urging the various national martime administration to reduce further the sailing time requirements by allowing 'virtual sailing time' to recruits who follow some special training or simulator courses! ...

See also: Course, Boat, Sailing, Forward, Right