Twenty years of (mostly) good luck sailing and motoring on the Muscongus and the Penobscot Bay has taught me the luck component. John Harries of Attainable Adventures, a great cruising blog, has a lot to say about the wreck of Team Vestas Wind on a reef in the Indian Ocean that is oh so easy to find via Google Earth. - gwc
The Loss of “Team Vestas Wind”:
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The Loss of “Team Vestas Wind”:
A huge amount of internet ink has been spilled about the shipwreck of the Volvo 65 Team Vestas Wind. But the significant news amongst all of that blather and second guessing is that the navigator Wouter Verbraak has taken complete responsibility for a terrible mistake.
There is also this useful piece [from Geo Garage Marine with charts, etc.]that postulates that Verbraak made the classic error of not examining his route at a large enough magnification, and thereby missed the shallow water in their path. In my opinion, that’s probably exactly what happened, particularly since Verbraak himself linked to it.
To me there are three things we can all learn from this accident:
- There but for the grace of a higher power, or luck (depending on how you look at the world), go any of us.
- The magnification error is a constant source of danger that can trap even the best navigators and we must all guard against it.
- Electronic data representation has an intrinsic danger: all of us tend to ascribe a higher level of accuracy to the underlying data than is justified.
- *** click through the headline for a long, smart discussion**
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