Category Archives: Uncategorized

Cornell, Vigor, Rules: Ontario Sailor Reviews

World Voyage PlannerWorld Voyage Planner
By Jimmy Cornell

Jimmy Cornell has sailed more than 200,000 miles on all the oceans of the world, has circumnavigated three times, and began rallies to safely get lots of other sailors across the Atlantic or around the world. And he’s still helping sailors, this time with the release of the soft-cover version of his World Voyage Planner, which outlines the best route and time to leave to get to your particular paradise. The book sections the different routes by oceans, with chapters on the Atlantic, Pacific, Mediterranean and Indian oceans, with the final chapter covering around-the-world voyages. There are three options for going from Canada or the U.S. to Europe; a northern latitude route in June or July to northern Europe and then a trip south to the Mediterranean in the fall; Bermuda and on to Gibraltar, especially for those sailors starting south of the Chesapeake; And finally sailing south to the Caribbean for the winter and heading to Europe in the spring. The book begins with planning the trip, including which boat is best (it depends, but a comfortable cockpit and a hard dodger are good), crew (healthy, add one or two on a long passage), finances (from $10,000 to $60,000 a year, but upgrade the boat before leaving, carry spares and stay out of marinas and marine stores) and weather. This book is an ideal planner for a trip anywhere in the world.

 

Practical Mariner's Book of KnowledgeThe Practical Mariner’s Book of Knowledge, 2nd Ed.
By John Vigor

This book by marine journalist John Vigor, a dinghy racing champion in South Africa who know lives in Bellingham, Washington, offers an eclectic mix of the useful and the whimsical on boating – everything from sizing an anchor to figuring out paint coverage or a colour-scheme for running rigging. With no graphics or photos or even colour on the page, the book manages to be interesting enough to prompt you to pick it up at different times to while away hours testing yourself on boat knowledge. It’s organized alphabetically, and offers more than 400, soup-to-nuts nautical theories, definitions and terms. Vigor sailed his 31 ft. sailboat more than 7,000 miles from Durban, South Africa to the Caribbean and up the Florida coastline to “escape” South Africa’s problems. He’s written for newspapers and sailing magazines and gained lots of boater knowledge, which he is now sharing with others. By the way, in answer to the above-raised questions, to paint the topsides you need to calculate the length on deck (in feet), plus beam, multiplied by 2 and multiplied by the average freeboard; A 35 ft. sailboat should have a 12 lb. Danforth anchor and/or a 25 lb. CQR; And a jib or genoa line should be blue, red for a spinnaker sheet, green for topping lifts and orange for lines for vangs and travelers. Dive in to the mix and enjoy.

 

Paul Evstrom's Racing RulesPaul Elvstrom Explains The Racing Rules of Sailing
Edited by Soren Krause

Author and winning Olympic sailor Paul Elvstrom says the racing rules for sailors are “among the most complicated of any sport” but it’s easy to stay out of trouble and “preserve friendships” and promote racing by sailing against others the same way that you would like them to sail against you. “It is great to win…but only if the other competitors join in the pleasure,” Elvstrom says in the introduction. His book goes on to explain the latest changes made to the rules of racing completed by the International Sailing Federation (ISAF), which mixes things up after each Olympics. Some new rules, to be in effect until 2016 ensures skippers give “wiggle room” to others to change course on a run whether they are on the same or an opposite tack, improves the definition of “mark room” and allows more latitude to help crew in danger by, say, falling overboard. The smaller-format book comes with a plastic sleeve, to protect if from water in the cockpit and small, along with plastic boat models to show the racecourse transgression to others, or explain the new rules. There are helpful, colour graphics with interpretations on the new rules and changes, and the back cover shows racing signals and flag combinations for skippers and crew.

 

Rules in PracticeThe Rules in Practice 2013-2016
By Bryan Willis

This 8th edition is a larger-format book with colourful graphics to help the reader through situations in which the new racing rules would apply. It’s more graphical than Paul Elvstrom’s book (see above review), and a little easier for the novice to understand. The author, Bryan Willis, has been chairman of the jury and chief umpire for events like the Olympics and America’s Cup, and has been a member of the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) racing rules committee for 25 years. So, there’s little doubt that he knows his stuff. He says there’s satisfaction in going into a mark rounding in second place and coming out in first — more than sailing faster on a run. That comes with knowing the rules. With the help of layout artists, the author offers sailors a great resource to keep them out of trouble, or to argue their case when trouble finds them. A graphic on a given racing situation is offered, with boats close together on the course, followed by explanations on the various rights and obligations of skippers in the various boats, along with the rule numbers needed to argue your case before the umpire. Different scenarios are offered, such as during a gate start, rounding the windward mark, the finish, and on a reach. The back section spells out the ISAF racing rules.

Superships of the Great Lakes, Dingy Cruising, and Garbage Management Plans

From the books mentioned in the title of this post, to Warships of the Bay of Quinte, to the International Maritime Organisation’s 2011 STCW, the last month saw an amazingly diverse range of books arrive at The Nautical Mind. Well, they’re all somehow related to ships and the sea, but other than that it’s an amazingly diverse range.

Warships of the Bay of Quinte

Warships of the Bay of Quinte

Standards of Training, Certification, & Watchkeeping for Seafarers 2011

Dinghy Cruising

Continue reading

Announcing our Professional Licensing Study Guide

We are excited to announce the first phase of our new Professional Licensing study guide! This guide is aimed at anyone who is trying to study for a Transport Canada license or individual exam.

To start off we have  finished the guides for the 150 Ton Master and the Small Vessel Machinery Operator (SVMO), both found on the Certificates page. If you are just writing individual exams you can search them through the Exams page. More exams and licenses will follow with time, we hope to one day be able to list all exams on the site.

Please tell your friends, co-workers and fellow students about this guide, we are hoping this will become the go-to resource in Canada for everyone working towards a Transport Canada license.

Bridge Resource Management, Confined Spaces, and Modernity: A Selection of Recent Arrivals at the Nautical Mind

An interesting and diverse bunch of great new books has arrived at the bookstore in the past month.  A selection is listed below.

Ship Style: Modernism and Modernity at Sea in the 20th Century

Ship Style: Modernism and Modernity at Sea in the 20th Century

Confined Spaces, ISBN 1905331819

Confined Spaces from Seamanship International

Bridge Resource Management by Daniel Parrot, ISBN 0071550070

Bridge Resource Management for Small Ships

Bucking the Tide by David Buckman, ISBN 1892168154

Bucking the Tide

Ship Style: Modernism and Modernity at Sea in the 20th Century by Phil Dawson & Bruce Peter – $47.95

When I Heard the Bell: The Loss of the Iolaire by John MacLeod – $24.95

Confined Spaces (Pocket Safety Guide Series) by Seamanship International – $11.95

Bridge Resource Management for Small Ships by Daniel Parrott - $58.95

Ship Handling: Theory and Practice by David House – $71.95

Torrie & the Pirate Queen by K.V. Johansen – $9.95
Continue reading

Hello from s/v Receta

Ann Vanderhoof, author of An Embarassment of Mangoes and The Spice Necklace, writes:

Hello from s/v Receta

Steve and I are currently anchored in Tyrrel Bay, Carriacou. Two-and-a-half months into the dry season, the island (which depends entirely on rainwater) is still green, and cisterns are overflowing – a welcome relief for residents after last year’s punishing drought. For visitors, the frequent showers and squalls are…challenging. But the just-picked tomatoes (amazingly sweet), juicy grapefruit, and crisp okra from backyard gardens – not to mention the rainbows – are our rewards.

Carriacou Saline

Carriacou Saline

Continue reading

Nautical Mind staff visit the Peking

Here are some photos of the barque Peking at South Street Seaport in New York City.

Rhys (on the right) is one of our staff and is seen here standing with his brother under the bow of the Peking. Peking sailed the world for years, working in the nitrate trade, as a training ship named Arethusa II and finally, with original name restored,  as the main attraction at South Street Seaport Maritime Museum.

Peking is the ship featured in the incredible film Around Cape Horn, and the accompanying book Peking Battles Cape Horn, both by Irving Johnson. The film contains some of the most incredible footage of large square-riggers ever recorded, particularly as it was captured in 1929! It was on this voyage that Johnson first got his taste of sailing, from this auspicious beginning he went on to spend the rest of his life at sea, and is considered one of the founders of modern Sail Training.

The photo below shows the builder’s plate onboard Peking. She was built in 1911 at Blohm and Voss in Hamburg; This famous German yard is known for such ships as the World War II battleship Bismarck, and more recently Eclipse, considered the world’s largest private yacht.

Here is a great photo of Peking sailing with full press, though she appears to empty judging by the bootstripe.

Lastly, here is a photo looking forward from Peking’s quarterdeck, showing her massive spars and the skyline of Lower Manhattan.


Free Vexillology with Every Purchase!

A Visual Guide to the Flags of the World

A Visual Guide to the Flags of the World

Easily determine which country, organisation, or signal a flag represents based on its shape, colours, and pattern.  A Visual Guide to the Flags of the World by Nautical Mind alum and expert vexillologist V.S. de Kleer is a great reference for anyone who ever wondered what a white and red checkered flag meant (p 32).  If you stop by our “brick and mortar” location and mention this post, we’ll give you a free copy with any purchase.  Alternatively, if you’d prefer the free shark-punching instructions, you’re welcome to those too.

Oil, Economics, Electrical Systems and Other Recent Arrivals

Oil Record Book Part 2 by Transport Canada – $14.95

Rules and Regulations For the Classification of Ships by Lloyd’s – $556.95

Marine Navigation: Piloting and Celestial and Electronic Navigation by Richard R. Hobbs – $104.95

Checklists (Masters Pocketbook Series) by Captain Michael Lloyd – $42.95

Oilfield Seamanship Series, Vol. 2: Jack-up Moving by Michael Hancox – $129.95

Oilfield Seamanship Series, Vol. 7: Stability and Ballast Control by Michael Hancox – $255.95

Maritime Economics by Martin Stopford – $104.95

The Lancashire Nobby by Nick Miller – $34.95

Understanding DC Boat Electrical Equipment by John C. Payne – $16.95

Understanding Boat Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Systems by John C. Payne – $16.95

Ships’ Electrical Systems by Rene & Hans Ten Katen Borstlap – $79.95

The Crew’s Pocketbook by Timothy Davison – $23.95

Shantyboat Journal by Harlan Hubbard – $37.50

The Legend of Imp: The Story of the Magical Yacht that Rocked the Sailing World by Bill Barton – $85.00

Cruising the Leeward Islands of the Caribbean: St. Martin to Dominica by Bennett – $34.95

MODU Code – $42.95

Sail Simulator 5 CD-ROM Deluxe includes Boatset by Stentec Software – $77.95

GPS for Mariners by Robert J. Sweet – $23.95

Oil Record Book

Oil Record Book Part 2: Cargo Ballast Operations