JULY 2018
Losing the Plotter
The deceptive simplicity of navigating by tablet By Andy Schell
W
hen my wife, Mia, and I i rst
crossed the Atlantic on our
Allied Seawind 36, Arcturus, in
2011, we used the same hand-
held GPS that my parents had aboard their
Bristol 38, Sojourner, in 1993 when we spent
the winter in the Bahamas when I was only
nine. We’ve never owned a i xed chartplotter.
On Isbjörn, our S&S Swan 48, we’re no lud-
dites, but we emphasize ei ciency, simplicity
and presence of mind in how we outi t her.
Which is why we now choose to navigate via
a dual iPad setup—a large, semi-i xed iPad at
the nav station below and a smaller, “portable”
iPad, running the same sot ware, that we can
bring up to the cockpit.
To give some context here, we’re of shore
most of the time on Isbjorn. In 2017 alone we
spent 137 days at sea, covering over 10,000
miles. Of shore, you don’t need a chartplotter,
save for the AIS data, and that only really in
poor visibility or when a ship is in sight. We
plot a position on our paper passage chart once
or twice a day and log the GPS position, DR
plot, etc. every four hours at the watch change
in the hardcopy logbook.
Inshore, of course, real-time navigation
on some kind of chartplotter is a nice luxury
and makes navigating much less stressful,
particularly in the labyrinthine archipelagos
on both coasts of Sweden, where we’ve spent
a lot of time recently. Still, in my mind at
least, less is more.
You see, I like a clean helm. I like a nice
compass, a big roll bar to hang on to and sim-
ple wind/depth/speed instruments mounted
over the companionway where everyone can
see them. When I’m on the helm, or teaching
a crew to drive the boat, I like to be present—
aware of my surroundings in the real-world,
both from a purely philosophically perspec-
tive, but also for spatial awareness, to keep
rooted in reality. Isn’t it ironic that while sail-
ing is a means of escape for many, with i xed
chartplotters we remain glued to our screens,
even at the helm?
A 30-something friend and Google employee
who’s currently on a mid-career sabbatical sail-
ing his Outbound 46, Pineapple, in Mexico, said
of modern helm-stations, “Folks seem to want a
command center, with lots of fancy knobs and
buttons and screens. But the reality of short-
handed cruising is that you’re almost never at
the helm. h e autopilot is driving, and you’re
doing something else.”
Enter the iPad. On Isbjörn, since we’re
almost always six crew onboard, we assign
a dedicated navigator who’s in charge of the
iPad, kept in a waterproof LifeProof “Nuud”
case, in the cockpit. Another crew is at the
helm and focuses on sailing/steering the boat.
h e navigator can stand beside or behind the
helmsperson, who has immediate access to the
chartplotting sot ware on the iPad.
If you’re shorthanded, like in Pineapple’s
case, a simple, removable ROKK mount at
PHOTOS COURTESY OF
ANDY SCHELL AND MIA KARLSSON
ON DECK NAVIGATION
The iPad at the nav station can
be taken on deck if necessary
Isbjörn was fi tted out
with simplicity in mind