NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: book - the complete on-board celestial navigator
From: Peter Fogg
Date: 2003 Mar 24, 14:32 +1100
From: Peter Fogg
Date: 2003 Mar 24, 14:32 +1100
HGWorks - Phil Guerra wrote: > First, I'm not a professional navigator, just very interested in learning > all I can about the subject of celestial navigation. To that end, I began > researching information and collecting books on navigation. I was drawn to > the book you mentioned for the same reason, inclusion of an almanac for > 2003-2007, and hoped that this book would allow me to learn the process of > sight reduction. > > I received the book, and briefly read through it. On page 8, the author > states "Before studying celestial navigation, the reader must be conversant > with such basic navigational quantitative as latitude, longitude, azimuth, > etc., and be able to plot the passage of a vessel and fix its position in a > coastal situation. > Well, gee, that means I bought the wrong book, because I thought part of > studying a subject included not knowing something about it in the first > place. While I did know the basics regarding latitude, longitude, and > azimuth, I am more than a little fuzzy on the etc. and plotting methods. I > thought that this book would clear it up, but I was mistaken. It is more a > book for an experience navigator. It has been said that CN is one subject most people find very difficult to learn from a book and I think this is broadly true. The assumption with this book is that the user is at least familiar with coastal nav. which includes plotting; essentially advancing a position across a chart or plotting sheet according to direction and speed. The rest you seem to have. Perhaps 'briefly read through it' has not done it justice. As in an earlier reply to Gerard Mittelstaedt (which has not been delivered to the list, there is a problem here) I think the best way to learn to use the book is to take it a little at a time and work through the examples given. Having done that, the Silicon Sea series (available through the archives of this list) offers much more practice, its a wonderful resource. On learning CN in general, in the 'good ole days' (which were, of course, anything but) essentially uneducated sailors who may have been barely able to write learned to navigate because they had to, and learned by rote, and did manage to find their way about. In these enlightened ( ! ) days, the emphasis is on understanding the process. This does take some mental work, and many people (myself included, I determinedly, but perhaps too briefly, read books about CN before taking a course) find this easier in a classroom situation with an instructor to guide the group through the process of learning and take the effort to make clear concepts that can be difficult to grasp. But having done this, what you need to practise CN is an almanac and a few other bits'n'pieces. What I find so great about this book is that everything you need has been put together in a handy format. There is more in my earlier reply which hopefully will appear at some time.