Navigation Rules: Nav Aids

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июл 2024
  • Learn the basic boating Navigation Aids.
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Комментарии • 68

  • @poc7667
    @poc7667 Год назад +14

    OMG, you did a fantastic job on explaining this Nav aids, after i watched many youtube videos, yours is the most cleared one. keep it short keep it clear!

  • @MeltingFire68
    @MeltingFire68 Год назад +4

    This is one of the clearest and informative explanations I've seen yet. Thank you very much !!

  • @KM.130
    @KM.130 Год назад +3

    This may have been the most clearly informative video I've seen yet. You explain everything very well. Going to request my whole family view this as I'd like to sometimes just be a passenger on the boat without having to stand right next to helm. This video should give any of them the confidence to operate our boat. Thank you very much.

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  Год назад +1

      Thanks so much for the kind words. I'm so glad you fount this helpful.

  • @quill6211
    @quill6211 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great boating the USA instructional video.

  • @stuartkidney3257
    @stuartkidney3257 2 месяца назад

    well done Captain Scott! Excellent teaching/demo methodology to assist learning :)

  • @SBAtmost
    @SBAtmost 3 месяца назад

    Well done! I now have clarity regarding returning to shore vs. ICW markers. Thank you!

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  3 месяца назад

      I'm so glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for your kind words!

  • @lambodriver6983
    @lambodriver6983 Год назад +17

    These rules only apply in the US. In Australia the red markers are to port and green to starboard when returning to harbour. This might be good to note in the videos.

    • @tonykiek
      @tonykiek Год назад +1

      In Australia I use the acronym "PLI SLO" meaning Port Left In, Starboard Left Out"

    • @gondwanatravels8834
      @gondwanatravels8834 Год назад +1

      Red 2 red coming in

    • @grahamalbrey2804
      @grahamalbrey2804 Год назад +1

      or the one I use,.... Port to Port to Port,😏Port to Stbd to sea.

    • @garamac
      @garamac 10 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed. The system in the video is the opposite to what applies in most other countries around the world. For some reason, the US decided they were not part of the international community and decided not to conform to the international standard when it was introduced.

    • @lambodriver6983
      @lambodriver6983 10 месяцев назад

      @garamac Agreed. One day they will realise that they may need to confirm to global standards, but I am not holding my breath.

  • @user-qy7im6wi6v
    @user-qy7im6wi6v Год назад +3

    In Canada we use some different terms but the international system is similar otherwise. I live on the Canada-USA border and I have sailed all the Great Lakes and the connecting rivers (except Lake Michigan) all the way to the Atlantic many times. I have never seen a preferred channel marker showing two colours on four parts. They are always two colours on three approximately equal-size parts. I believe your example of a port hand preferred channel buoy should appear as green, red, green. In the video the top and bottom parts of the preferred channel marker should be green and cover a total of approximately 2/3 of the buoy with the middle 1/3 red. A simpler description would be a green buoy with a red band. I like to associate the main colour with the main channel. Pass the buoy as though it displays only its main colour to continue in the main channel. Pass it as though it displays only its secondary colour to enter the secondary channel. Ultimately a preferred channel buoy is two buoys in one. It marks the boundaries of both the main and secondary channels where the port side of one channel meets the starboard side of the other.

  • @nickmoreno3885
    @nickmoreno3885 4 месяца назад

    Thanks Scott, this was super helpful! - extra helpful for me personally because I work on the architecture tours in Chicago and in the harbor so I knew where I was haha

  • @raulpendas
    @raulpendas Год назад +1

    Great video. Thank you

  • @jesus3901
    @jesus3901 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for your very clear explanations.

  • @dragonclaws9367
    @dragonclaws9367 Год назад +2

    I only ever drove my dad's 14 foot v hull but all this fascinates me. Thank you for telling me why we had a red and green light on the nose. I just thought it was cool and decorative when I was 10 I always wanted it on. So fascinating and Merry Christmas!

  • @tonkacaptain
    @tonkacaptain Год назад +3

    One way I remember green markers are odd numbered is a slogan I came up with "green is odd, and if you're odd your square". My other saying is for the ICW. That saying is "green tea - green sea" meaning in most cases is if I am south bound on the ICW on the east coast of the USA I should keep my green markers to my port.

  • @derrickclemons2862
    @derrickclemons2862 Год назад +1

    One of the best videos I’ve seen. Good job!

  • @CampGachlatha
    @CampGachlatha 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great video

  • @osteopata777
    @osteopata777 Год назад +4

    Great video. It would have been great to mention in the introduction that these navigational aids refer to the IALA system of AREA B and not A. Greetings and cheers from AREA A

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  Год назад +2

      That's a great point. Things are a little different in Europe

    • @iainhunneybell
      @iainhunneybell 11 месяцев назад

      Absolutely my first thought, IALA A or B? But the reply is revealing … “Things are a little different in Europe”. NO, absolutely not. This is a common viewpoint … ‘The world’ starts at LAX and ends at NYC. Actually, almost the entire world uses IALA A, that ‘funny’ European system. Okay, IALA B is north and south America, the Philippines, Korea and Japan, areas with heavy US presence, but excepting that, THE ENTIRE WORLD uses IALA A … which is probably why it’s designated ‘A’ … and the ‘second scheme’ is known as ‘B’. So it’s not ‘different in Europe’, it’s ‘different in the US’! And why does the US use red cones/green cans? Folk lore says it was an attempt to confuse the British during the War of Independence so that the Brit might get confused and run aground, but no doubt 100 people will shout this reason down as the final A/B agreement wasn’t until 1980 … but that’s different to what might have started the switch, principally of lateral mark colors

  • @andrewlinesjah4538
    @andrewlinesjah4538 Год назад +1

    A very insightful video

  • @baileyflanagan3059
    @baileyflanagan3059 Месяц назад

    Perfect example of explain it to me like im 5 years old lol

  • @user-wx8uj4xr2q
    @user-wx8uj4xr2q 5 месяцев назад +1

    comprehensive explananation.

  • @globyois
    @globyois Год назад +1

    GREAT MEMORY AID, the 7-up can.

  • @capt.abdulazizal-hammadi1675
    @capt.abdulazizal-hammadi1675 Год назад +5

    My friend, It's called Aids to Navigation, not Navigation Aids.
    The Nav aids are the tools in the vessel, such as ECDIS, Radar, GPS, navigation charts, etc.
    But the Aids to Navigation are buoys, beacons, lighthouses, etc.

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  Год назад +2

      That is a valuable technical correction. Thanks for calling that out.

  • @sheenbean2
    @sheenbean2 Год назад +1

    This was so helpful

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  Год назад +1

      Glad you found it resourceful. If there are other topics you’d like to see a video on, I’d love to hear about them.

  • @ppgwhereeverett4412
    @ppgwhereeverett4412 Год назад +1

    VERY informative !!

  • @grahamalbrey2804
    @grahamalbrey2804 Год назад +5

    This is very confusing. In Australia its all the other way around. I always thought the rules of navigation were international.

    • @JK50with10
      @JK50with10 10 месяцев назад +1

      They are. Except for the US who have to be special.

    • @josefkrycha
      @josefkrycha 3 месяца назад

      Here in Europe the rules are also different. On the port side we have red lights and red lateral markers (because the Porto wine is red 😂)

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  3 месяца назад

      Yeah, This is specific to IALA-B (The Americas). In IALA-A (Includes Australia and Europe) it's green right returning. Brutal right!?!

  • @FluffyKL
    @FluffyKL Год назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @samjohnson1542
    @samjohnson1542 Год назад +1

    Thanks Again.

  • @rossprentice4975
    @rossprentice4975 Год назад +4

    Most countries use green to starboard and red to port when entering a harbour

    • @cardesavas
      @cardesavas 3 месяца назад +1

      That depends on system that country belongs to, IALA A or B. IALA A is used by countries in Africa, most of Asia, Australia, Europe and India. IALA B is used by countries in North, Central and South America, Japan, Korea and the Philippines.

  • @michaeljohnson91501
    @michaeljohnson91501 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hold up I thought the green ones are the tree shaped ones....

  • @ElGringoMID
    @ElGringoMID Год назад

    @ 15:15 I think that the Se means Southeast not Sea Guide light...

  • @AV8R_1
    @AV8R_1 2 года назад +1

    Why is there a different bouy for the reef than for the rocks?

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  2 года назад +1

      It's not that the buoys identify the different hazards but rather different sides of the channel. The danger below could be anything that could potentially ground a boat. My goal in showing both reef and rock in this video was simply to express some variety.

    • @AV8R_1
      @AV8R_1 2 года назад +1

      @@capt_scott_souders ok. I just wonder why they would use two different shaped bouys to signal what is effectively the same thing. An underwater hazard. I’m trying to learn all this stuff but it’s crazy confusing. Seems like some signs could be made a lot easier to understand. Like the ICW signs with the yellow triangles or squares. They could literally put signs that say ICW SOUTH AHEAD or OCEAN LEFT or HARBOR RIGHT. Etc. Lol. Still working my way through the video. Thanks BYW.

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  2 года назад +2

      @@AV8R_1 It is definitely challenging and even a little more so when you're on the water. Navigation aids are often provided in an "everything you need" manner, which rarely is the exhaustive "everything we want" when identifying hazards.
      I can't speak on behalf of the US Coast Guard, Department of Transportation, or the inventor of navigation aids but, I have always believed that lateral markers have been given distinctive shapes in order to accommodate color-blind mariners. Those who can't identify Red from Green could effectively use bouy shape in order to determine the left and right sides of the channel. While I don't know that this is specifically the case, it does help me to rationalize the end product.

  • @davidbentle929
    @davidbentle929 2 года назад +1

    Having problems understanding the preferred channel system. Are you saying that the green on top for cool kid island is preferred so you keep the ISLAND on the left? That means you go RIGHT doesn’t it? Or, are you also having to consider the something else, like the lateral channel markers??

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  2 года назад

      You're correct. Treating the preferred channel marker like a green lateral channel marker (its top color and preference indicator in this case) would mean leaving it to port as you "return from sea," which would also require altering course to starboard in this example.

    • @davidbentle929
      @davidbentle929 2 года назад

      @@capt_scott_souders Thanks for the reply.

  • @fredcanavan3864
    @fredcanavan3864 11 месяцев назад

    Good but worst choice of words, “tip of the iceberg”. Haha

  • @daveauffret8263
    @daveauffret8263 Год назад

    IALA A or B ? Europe is opposite

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  3 месяца назад

      Correct! This video best fits those boating in North, Central, and South America (IALA-B). IALA-A would be opposite,
      green right returning.

  • @BingoBabyO
    @BingoBabyO Год назад +2

    Just thought of something today while being told Red Right Returning… Red Left Leaving? Did anyone use that before ?

    • @capt_scott_souders
      @capt_scott_souders  Год назад +1

      I think that's an original. If it works for you, by all means use it!

  • @mrgooba1124
    @mrgooba1124 3 месяца назад +1

    Yanks lol

  • @KEALOHA669
    @KEALOHA669 Год назад

    navionics APP sucks very hard to use, to much control of my smartphone which i have NO control of. !!!!!!!!!! NOT a GOOD APPP! VERY UNHAPPPY U ARE PROMOTING THIS! IVE UNSUBSCRIDED AND BLOCKED UR SITE

    • @JT_70
      @JT_70 Год назад

      Get a marine GPS/depth finder. Navionics works great with it.

  • @gustavodiaz4689
    @gustavodiaz4689 11 месяцев назад

    Great video