The Art of Seamanship
International Marine Publishing Co (Verlag)
978-0-07-149342-0 (ISBN)
Wind, waves, weather, and water demand the practiced art of seamanship"Planning and reacting to the unanticipated are the flip sides of seamanship. This blending of pre-voyage preparedness with effective on-the-water response is learned rather than inherent--together they define the art of seamanship." -- Author RALPH NARANJO
Each time a sailboat casts off its docklines the sailor enters a marine realm that demands knowledge, preparedness, vigilance, and coolheadedness--these qualities are the foundation of good seamanship. Both an art as well as a science, seamanship is also the mastery of numerous practical details, from the best choice of line for a jib sheet to an accurate assessment of the passage of a deep low-pressure system.
Around-the-world sailor Ralph Naranjo--technical expert, ocean racer, former Vanderstar Chair at the U.S. Naval Academy--delivers a priceless reference for anything that comes up while on the water, sharing all the knowledge today's sailors need to "hand, reef, and steer"--an enduring reference to the collective skills of the bluewater sailor. Naranjo's vast knowledge is supported by real-life examples of sailing mishaps, sample itineraries, vibrant photos, as well as first-hand accounts and sidebarsfrom top sailors and marine experts, including Shelia McCurdy, Chuck Hawley, Lee Chesneau, and Paul Miller, N.A.Seamanship is a dynamic art, demanding full attention from the sailor amidst a constant flow of information and knowledge.
The Art of Seamanship will improve your problem-solving skills, whether daysailing around the harbor or voyaging around the world.
You'll learn:
The attributes of a good skipper and crew—includingphysical and mental agility, effective communication, andknowledge-based decision makingFine-tuning your voyaging with the seaworthiness of your boat and the capability of your crew in mindUsing weather information and routing resources to lower risks and raise rewardsDeveloping advanced boat-handling skills—includingheaving-to, towing a drogue, reefing, setting storm sails,and kedgingLines, line handling, and rigging--making sure the right strings are attached, including an in-depth look at modern rope constructionAnchoring--the art of staying put--with a realistic lookat tackle from lunch hooks to storm anchorsSails, modern sail material, sail trim, sail handling, and hardware, from hanked-on headsails to the latest top-down furlersNavigating in the satellite age, including paper and digital chartplotting, how to best use the new equipment, plus understanding the role of celestial navigation as a fail-safeSailboat design and dynamics, including the role of vessel structure and stability and a look at what your current boat has to offer and what to look for in a new boatSharing crowded waters and understanding the reasonsbehind the "rules of the road"How to be ready for any emergency, including fire, crewoverboard, a flooding bilge, or the need to abandon shipEstablishing reliable communication, including VHF, AIS, SSB, satellite phones, and beacon signaling (EPIRBS, PLBS)
Ralph Naranjo (Annapolis, MD) was technical editor of Cruising World magazine for 12 years, during which he reviewed and sea-tested hundreds of new boats and their systems. For ten years, as Vanderstar Chair at the U.S. Naval Academy, he directed the Academy’s sail training program with specific focus on safety, seamanship, navigation, and vessel readiness. He was the Academy’s lead agent in the design and acquisition of a fleet of 30 new 44-foot sailing craft—a $15 million, Congressionally funded program. For ten years he managed the Seawanhaka Boatyard and Marina in Oyster Bay, Long Island. He is a marine industry consultant and expert witness, a past chair of the U.S. Sailing Safety at Sea Committee, a frequent U.S. Sailing Safety at Sea seminar moderator, a U.S. Coast Guard licensed master (100 tons), a member of the Explorers Club and the Cruising Club of America, and a past Storm Trysail Club board member. A U.S. Sailing Master Trainer, he understands what recreational boaters need to know about seamanship, and he knows how to teach them. He has written some 200 articles for boating magazines and has won three Boating Writers International awards. He has completed three transatlantic passages, eight Bermuda Races, and numerous other offshore passages under sail and power, and completed a five-year voyage around the world under sail with his wife and children.
CHAPTER 1: The Art and Science of Seamanship
The Safety Triangle
Seamanship by the Boat
The Safety Triangle in the Era of Offshore Rallies
What Is Seamanship, by Sheila McCurdyChapter 2: Planning Is Seamanship
Are You Prepared
Preparing the Boat
Preparing the Crew
Preparing the Itinerary
Avoiding Harm's Way
Preparing the Boat
Preparing the Crew
Turning a Plan into a Good Plan
Bermuda and Hawaii
Sample Itinerary for a One-Year East Coast Adventure
Chapter 3: Evolving as Skipper or Crew
Attributes of a Good Crewmember
Attributes of a Good Skipper
What Cruisers Can Learn from Racers
Training Opportunities
Evolving as Crew, by Lenore Naranjo
Hands-on Training Opportunities
Chapter 4: Boat Handling
Contingency Thinking
Boat-Handling Factors and Techniques
Performance Tweaks
The Boat-Handling Routine
Special Maneuvering Situations
Chapter 5: Lines, Line Handling, and Rigging
Line Selection
Line Handling
Running Rigging Leads and Hardware
Putting away the Lines
Knots to Know
Chapter 6: Anchors and Anchoring
Not-So-Serene Irene
Ground Tackle Sizing
Anchor Types
Anchor Performance in Tests versus the Real World
Anchor Rodes and Connecting Hardware
Ground-Tackle Connections
Ground-Tackle Handling Gear
Anchoring Tactics
Chapter 7: Sails and Sail Handling
Sailing Science
Masthead versus Fractional Rigs
Sail Technology
Shaping Sails Underway
Managing the Mainsail
Managing Headsails
Sail Repair
Material Choices
Chapter 8: Navigation
A Navigator's Day's Work at Sea
A Day’s Work Now
Piloting with Paper Charts and Ship's Compass
Navigation Publications
Electronic Navigation
Celestial Navigation
A Final Plea to Avoid Blind Faith in Electronic Fixes
Chapter 9: Sharing Crowded Waters
The Navigation Rules: An Overview
A Tour of the Rules
Making Landfall
Chapter 10: Reading the Sea and Sky
Living-Room Learning
The Flying Colours Incident
Thunderstorms
Surface Weather Systems
500-Millibar Charts
Tropical Weather Patterns
Weather Predictions
Professional Weather Services
Climate and Weather Cycles
Oceanographic Impacts on Wind and Sea
Unlocking the Mystery of the 500 Mb Chart, by Lee Chesneau
Chapter 11: Handling Heavy Weather
The Heavy-Weather Threshold
Coastal Waters and Seeking Shelter
Preparing for Heavy Weather at Sea
Storm Canvas
Storm Tactics
Chapter 12: The Boats We Sail
Stability
So What Kind of Boat Do You Want
Capable Cruisers of 40 to 44 Feet
Inspecting a Boat
Chapter 13: Staying Safe
Preparing Your Boat for Sea
Safety Gear
Emergency Gear
Crew-Overboard Recovery
Fire Afloat
Bottom Line
PFDs and Life Jackets, by Captain Kip Louttit, USCG Retired and Auxiliary
The Wingnuts Tragedy Revisited
Responding to a Steering Failure, by Chuck Hawley
Chapter 14: Communications
Ocean Zones and Communications Equipment
Wi-Fi Afloat
NAVTEX
Rescue 21
Automatic Identification System (AIS)
Radio Talk
Making Choices
Index
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 16.10.2014 |
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Zusatzinfo | 75 Illustrations |
Verlagsort | Rockport, ME |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 226 x 287 mm |
Gewicht | 1243 g |
Themenwelt | Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Sport ► Segeln / Tauchen / Wassersport |
Technik ► Fahrzeugbau / Schiffbau | |
ISBN-10 | 0-07-149342-5 / 0071493425 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-07-149342-0 / 9780071493420 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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