NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Status of Celestial Nav in 2015
From: Alexandre Eremenko
Date: 2015 Mar 6, 03:35 +0000
From: Alexandre Eremenko
Date: 2015 Mar 6, 03:35 +0000
Lu,
Some do.
I know a German yachtsmen who sailed to Spitsbergen,
and I met a Russian team which sailed the Northeast passage (or perhaps some part of it).
(I am talking of sailboats, not cruising ships).
Alex.
>If you recollect the original question, it was about recreational sailors
using celestial. I'd have to wonder how many of them go north (or south) of
Lat 70....
Lu
From: Alexandre Eremenko
To: luabel{at}ymail.com
Sent: Thursday, March 5, 2015 11:51 AM
Subject: [NavList] Re: Status of Celestial Nav in 2015
Lu,
Is GPS navigation really available everywhere?
In particular in the Polar regions?
If not, what is the other reliable way of navigation in polar regions?
Alex.
________________________________________
From: NavList@navlist.net [NavList@navlist.net] on behalf of Lu Abel [NoReply_LuAbel@navlist.net]
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2015 8:51 PM
To: eremenko---.edu
Subject: [NavList] Re: Status of Celestial Nav in 2015
Remember that this started as a discussion of why one would use celestial in
2015. Emergency navigation was given as one possibility. I rather suspect
that in the two examples given by Greg the explorer was using celestial as a
primary means. That begs the question of "why?"
From: Greg Rudzinski
To: luabel{at}ymail.com
Sent: Wednesday, March 4, 2015 4:46 PM
Subject: [NavList] Re: Status of Celestial Nav in 2015
Alex,Sam Willis used celestial navigation on his trip down the Grand Canyon
last summer. See link to BBC show that has Sam making observations using an
artificial horizon.http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2f1pxgGeoffrey Kolbe
posted several years back on his North African desert celestial navigation
using a bubble octant. http://geoffrey-kolbe.com/C-Nav/index.htmGreg
Rudzinski
From: Alexandre Eremenko
Date: 2015 Mar 4, 22:00 +0000
Greg,
you wrote:
> I would add remote wilderness travelers to the list of those that might find
celestial navigation a useful back-up to GPS.
> A plastic sextant such as the Davis MK 3 wouldn't add much weight to the pack.
You would add this to the the question or this is a part of an answer?
Do you know any people traveling in remote wilderness (on land) who are
using Cel nav, or carry sextants, almanacs, etc.?
I have never heard of such people in modern times.
Alex.
:
https://navlist.net/Status-Celestial-Nav-2015-LuAbel-mar-2015-g30568
:
https://navlist.net/Status-Celestial-Nav-2015-LuAbel-mar-2015-g30581






