Yachting

(Wang) #1
The Admiralty chart is a wonderful
creation that most of us tend
to take too much for granted. If
you don’t have a copy, get hold
of Chart 5011, which isn’t really a
chart at all, more of a booklet. It
spells out every symbol found on
these wondrous publications and I,
for one, am well served by reading
through it at the beginning of the
season to make sure my memory
isn’t rusting out. This April’s trawl
reminded me about the fi gures,

with which this tiny section is
indeed rich. Note the following:
■ Depths and drying heights
(underlined, of course) – italic,
with decimals in subscript
■ Heights above MHWS – upright
letters in brackets
■ Contours – fi gures as near
perpendicular to the plane of the
contour line as practicality allows,
and bang on the line itself.
■ For light characteristics, ‘m’
signifi es the height in metres.
‘M’ is the luminous range in
nautical miles. The cartographers
sensibly don’t use the superfl uous
‘NM’. After all, what other miles
would they be?

If you’re uncertain about the precise meanings of any symbols or
numbers on this chart excerpt, grab a copy of Admiralty 5011

Tom Cunliffe has sailed tens of thousands
of miles all over the world and has been a
Yachtmaster Examiner since 1978

26 http://www.yachtingmonthly.com MAY 2016


PHOTOS: TOM CUNLIFFE UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED

‘What does


that mean?’


Washed up


Berths facing
away from the
fairway are less
prone to wash

Mid-stream river pontoons can make
an attractive proposition when you’re
looking for a berth. There’s only one
problem. Unlike a formal marina, whose
fi ngers are (or at least should be) in quiet
water, a midstream pontoon has all the

river traffi c barrelling by, and they don’t
all respect your topsides and slow down.
The result is that every weekend your
poor yacht spends hours bashing against
her fenders, which is no good at all.
What’s more, any grit in the equation

will grind away at the gelcoat. If there’s
a choice, the berth on the inside – away
from the main waterway – will be a lot
quieter. If it’s also the leeward berth with
the prevailing weather blowing off it, it’s
even more attractive.

Do not be misled by the
illustration. I am not advocating
getting rid of our lovely dry
GRP or teak-over-ply decks,
to replace them with the
traditional plank-on-frame
equivalents. What you see
here is the caulking kit for
tightening up the fi fty feet
of fl ush deck on the old pilot
cutter I sold years ago.
That was an awful lot of
seam to stop with cotton and
hot pitch. All history now, but I
still have that wonderful tarp of

proper cotton canvas.
Every boat needs one. I
use it every year to keep my
decks clean if I’m varnishing
my capping rail, servicing my
greasy windlass, or setting out
a picnic with red wine on the
foredeck. But only real canvas
will do. Plastic equivalents
are hateful. They’re slippery,
they crackle and they just
don’t work, so next time you
see a bolt of the right stuff in
a boatyard bin, grab it. You’ll
never look back.

A proper cotton
canvas tarpaulin –
every boat needs one

All hail, the good old tarp

Free download pdf