Boating

Quick Study

Specific ways to enhance intangible skills.

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Watch experience­d skippers handle their boats around a dock, and you’ll be impressed with the feel they have for the way their vessels move. So, how do beginning boaters develop that kind of boat sense? The National

Safe Boating Council has developed on-the-water courses to answer that need. We just completed an instructor training course and came away impressed with four “feel” elements of the NSBC’s offerings, plus a related one that’s always useful. You can practice them yourself too, but start slowly in protected, open water. —Capt. John Page Williams

BOATER’S EYE

Are you aware of your surroundin­gs and the way your boat is moving in relation to them? How can you tell when your boat is stationary? Situationa­l awareness is important. Pick a nearby fixed object, such as a dock or a channel marker, and sight quickly along a line to the background behind it. The position of the fixed object in relation to the background tells you at a glance how you are moving. If the boat is stationary, the marker and the object behind it (a tree, for example) form a sightline called a range. Make developing this boater’s eye a habit out on the water.

TAKING MARKS

The related skill involves using your boater’s eye in concert with two geometric axioms. Remember: Two points determine a line, and two lines determine a point. When you want to mark a spot, such as a fishing reef, look for objects that make up two ranges that intersect over your reef. Write them down in a notebook. Old-timers on my home waters of the Chesapeake call this “taking marks.” Even in the age of touchscree­n GPS, it’s a useful skill.

S.C.A.N.

A proven situationa­l awareness tool, the acronym stands for scan, concentrat­e, analyze and negotiate.

When underway at any speed, scan

240 degrees around your boat, beginning just aft of amidships on your starboard-side. Look as you rotate your eyes and head all the way forward and around to just aft on your port side. Then scan back to starboard and repeat. Focus close in while moving slowly, and farther out when moving faster. Concentrat­e: Are there other boats around? How many and how fast are they moving? Where are you in relation to the shoreline and channel markers? Analyze: Do you see them leaving any wakes that you’ll have to cross? Are any of them on courses that might intersect with yours? Do any objects block your way? Are course changes coming up? Negotiate: Maneuver appropriat­ely by steering and adjusting speed according to what you see around you.

FERRYING IN WIND AND CURRENT

A boat “vectors,” or reacts, to two forces acting on it from different directions, such as wind or current and propeller thrust. For example, if the wind is coming toward you at a 45-degree angle, your boat will slide sideways as it moves forward. Paddlers in canoes and kayaks know this effect as ferrying, and use it to avoid turning sideways and capsizing when crossing a strong current. Skilled powerboate­rs ferry to slide neatly into a dock. The place to experiment with ferrying is in open water. Once you get it working, you’ll feel like it’s magic, and people watching will too.

PATIENCE

Learn the way your boat responds to low-speed turns by observing how long it takes to “answer” your turn of the helm, and how to use a quick thrust from your engine to maneuver in different directions, in forward and reverse. Remember, there are no brakes. Practice patience and practice using as little throttle and helm as possible to maneuver the boat. A wise skipper once taught me, “Dock slowly, as if you have no reverse.” Once you learn how your boat reacts in open water, try putting it in a slip or alongside a fuel dock. You’ll soon dock like a pro.

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