With just a little more than a week remaining
before our planned departure date, final preparations are well underway
for all boats and crews and nearing completion. In addition to
all the provisioning chores and sea trials, captains and crews are checking
charts and loading routes, preparing paperwork required at our ports-of-call,
calculating fuel consumption and refueling needs, and keeping a wary eye on the
weather patterns.
And since one of the boats
in our fleet is departing from Nassau rather than Palm Beach, we also have to
coordinate a rendezvous on the high seas.
That extra 200 miles requires some additional planning around weather, departure
dates & times, as well as with planned communications. None of that is rocket science, but it does
require some thought, and some alternate “just in case” war-gaming.
Right now the plan for the
Nassau-based boat (Relish) calls for a
departure around 1100 on 16-May, which (given acceptable weather) would put her
at the rendezvous point 30 miles northeast
of Palm Beach at the same time the rest of the fleet should arrive given their planned departure time of 0800 on
17-May. Should weather intervene, Relish would have the option of ducking
into West End to wait out next steps from a closer port.
Regardless, a good communications
channel is needed to apprise all vessels of the status of the planned rendezvous,
especially if timing adjustments may be required. While all boats will have sat-phone
capability for any long distance communication needs, an interesting
alternative we will have is the inReach
device.
As you may recall from
previous posts, the Garmin (formerly Delorme) inReach is a compact
satellite-based communications device that provides for web-based graphical tracking
as well as text & email messaging capabilities. As it turns out, five of
the boats will have one of these aboard. (Note that the SPOT Messenger has
similar capabilities.) Further, while
normally text or email messaging requires the receiving party to have a
standard Internet or SMS connection, the inReach device allows inReach-to-inReach messaging using only
Iridium satellite connectivity. Thus it
becomes a very handy boat-to-boat communications channel for the fleet regardless
of distance, and completely independent of cellular, WiFi or VHF range
limitations. (And yes, as a part of our
preparations we test that out, too. And as
a side note, the inReach also has the capability to fetch abbreviated OCENS
weather forecasts for points along our intended route.)
Expand Left Pane |
Click on First Entry |
Relish's Track from Palm Beach to Nassau (ignore the straight line) |
Click for Popup Boxes and then "More" for Additional Detail |
You will also see a “Center” button at the top left of the page
display – that can be handy to re-center the map on our last reported position
(as of this posting that’s Fort Myers, so not useful until we get underway
again.) You will also see a “Message”
button….so yes, you can send us messages, although we ask folks use constraint there,
as that can add up to extra charges for us.
It should be reserved for critical communications.
One final note....you can also use the Marine Traffic web site (CLICK HERE) to track vessels by name since all will be AIS equipped.
One final note....you can also use the Marine Traffic web site (CLICK HERE) to track vessels by name since all will be AIS equipped.
Wishing you calm seas and a safe voyage!
ReplyDeleteStewart