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NAVIGATION TRAINING Section 10 Currents and Waves. Table of Contents. Section 1 Types of Navigation Section 2 Terrestial Coordinates Section 3 Charts Section 4 Compass Section 5 Nautical Publications Section 6 Navigational Aids. Table of Contents. Section 7 Buoyage
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NAVIGATION TRAINING Section 10 Currents and Waves
Table of Contents • Section 1 Types of Navigation • Section 2 Terrestial Coordinates • Section 3 Charts • Section 4 Compass • Section 5 Nautical Publications • Section 6 Navigational Aids
Table of Contents • Section 7 Buoyage • Section 8 Position Lines and Fixes • Section 9 Tides • Section 10 Currents • Section 11 Weather
Ocean Currents • Giant patterns of rotation “gyres” in each of the major ocean basins. • Caused by natural effects: salinity, temperature, the Coriolis Effect, etc. • Described in the Sailing Directions • Examples are the Gulf Stream, the Kuro Shio and the Owa Shio
Tidal Currents • Caused by the rise and fall of tides in coastal waters. • Speed and timing is dependent upon whether it is spring or neap tides, and the shape of the coast and the sea floor.
Relationship of Terms • Flood Current • A tidal current that flows towards shore (follows a low tide).
Relationship of Terms • Ebb Current • A tidal current that flows away from shore (follows a high tide).
Relationship of Terms • Slack Water • A period where there is no horizontal movement of water. Corresponds to the “stand” of the tide.
Set and Drift • Set: the direction of the current pushing; normally expressed in oT. • Drift: the speed of the water, normally expressed in knots. • Set and drift combined describe the current.
Waves • If the wind is blowing from the water onto the land they are onshore winds. This causes waves to break a little earlier, thus pushing them over.
Waves • If the wind blows from the land out to sea, they are offshore winds. They blow against the incoming swell and sustain the waves from breaking while they jack up a little higher and steeper before they break.
Water Temperature • Water temperatures off Vancouver Island vary between the high 40s F in the winter and the low 70's in the height of the summer, whilst temperatures in the inland waters can be a little cooler, some only getting up to only 55°F.
Swell • Most of the swells on the British Columbia coast are generated by storms that start in the Aleutians and spin down the coast of North America all fall and winter. • They get dragged onto the continent by the jet stream anywhere from Alaska to California.
Swell • This forces the water up and sort of trips the wave and it breaks, the top of the wave falls down in front of itself. • Here in BC the storms fire swell at us over a shorter distance. As a result, because our beaches slope gradually, our surfing waves are comparatively scaled down in size and power.
Rip Currents • A Rip Current is a current of water flowing out to sea. • Rips form when waves push large volumes of water onto the shore and the water returns seaward thorough channels between sand bars, behind islands and around rocky headlands.
Rip Currents • On a sea coast, they can be identified by a line of discoloured water, foam and debris floating seaward or an area on choppy or confused water in the swell.
Local Knowledge • In all outings on the water, observe local currents and waves, what direction they flow at what times, where the areas. • This will assist in: 1. Plotting the best course in certain weathers. 2. Knowing where floating objects might end up going ashore under the effects of the current.