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Why put your GPS in the oven?

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Why Put Your GPS In The Oven?

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Celestial_Navigation_CunliffeYes, it sounds odd but in an electrical storm this is the best place for any handheld GPS or VHF.

There are 199 other canny tips in Tom Cunliffe's new book 200 Skipper's Tips.Some you may know, others we guarantee you'll have never heard of.

On this page:

Buy Skipper's Tips here 

Download your free online sampler from the book

To give you a taste of the book we've put together a short sampler. There are 200 Skipper's Tips in the book itself but you can get the first ten for free here.

Watch the online Skipper's Tips videos here

You'll find handy tips, wrinkes and techniques on using  a self tailing winch, avoiding collisions, checking your rig and the perils of lobster pots.

 

Order your copy of 200 Skipper's Tips by Tom Cunliffe now.

Just some of Tom's sailing tips from the book:

BACK UP THE THE GALE

If you try to come alongside a wall conventionally in a strong offshore gale, you’ll struggle to get anyone ashore. As you lose way the keel stalls and a modern yacht with a cut-away profile blows off to leeward in short order. One solution is to nose up to the dock and have someone climb off the pulpit with a couple of lines. The problem is that most sailing boats, left to themselves, end up with bows at about 150 degrees to the wind. They prefer, therefore, to back up to the wall with a fender rigged. Have a nimble crew member ready on the transom – the sugar scoop’s ideal if you have one – and come in slowly astern until they can step off. It’s easier than you think because the helm is close to the action and the boat wants to do what you’re asking of her. Get a short stern line on, then run a long line to the bow and lead it via a fairlead to a windlass or winch. The rest is easy.

WEIGH THEM UP

If you're under the illusion that you have to change your lifejacket gas bottle every year, you may be wrong. Examine them closely and you'll see a 'safe weight for operation’ in the small print on one end. Take them home and pop them on the kitchen scales. If you’re OK, inflate the lifejackets with your lungs to make sure they’re tight and leave them overnight. Then deflate, repack and that’s it, done. Sometimes they last for years.

AN ELECTRICAL SHIELD
Next time you’re caught in an electrical storm, grab your handheld VHF radio and your spare GPS, and pop them in the oven. Shut the door and don’t light the gas! Whatever happens to any instrument with masthead antennae, the kit in the cooker will be OK. If you take a strike and lose all the main equipment – you probably will, whether thye are connected or not – you’ll still be able to communicate by radio and you’ll know where you are!

HALO HALO
When you see a halo around the sun or moon, stand by for dirty weather. We aren’t talking about those little ones that fuzz themselves around the heavenly body. These big chaps are sure-fire harbingers of unpleasantness. Watch the barometer. When it starts falling and the wind backs as well, that’s you for the high jump. If you’re safely anchored, let out all the cable you’ve got. Far out at sea without the option reeve up the deep reef penant, cook and meaty stew, then pray.
 

Tom Cunliffe is Britain's leading yachting journalist and author. He is a RYA® Yachtmaster® Instructor Examiner and writes regularly for Yachting Monthly, Yachting World and SAIL magazine. He also wrote and presented the BBC TV series, The Boats That Built Britain.