SEARCH
0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Prev | Current Page 113 | Next

Dampier, William, 1652-1715

"A Voyage to New Holland"

A ship ought therefore to
have its glasses very exact; and besides, an extraordinary care ought to
be used in heaving the log, for fear of giving too much stray line in a
moderate gale; and also to stop quickly in a brisk gale, for when a ship
runs 8, 9 or 10 knots, half a knot or a knot is soon run out, and not
heeded: but to prevent danger, when a man thinks himself near land, the
best way is to look out betimes, and lie by in the night, for a commander
may err easily himself; beside the errors of those under him, though
never so carefully eyed.
Another thing that stumbled me here was the variation, which, at this
time, by the last amplitude I had found to be but 7 degrees 58 minutes
west, whereas the variation at the Cape (from which I found myself not 30
leagues distant) was then computed, and truly, about 11 degrees or more:
and yet a while after this, when I was got 10 leagues to the eastward of
the Cape, I found the variation but 10 degrees 40 minutes west, whereas
it should have been rather more than at the Cape. These things, I
confess, did puzzle me: neither was I fully satisfied as to the exactness
of the taking the variation at sea: for in a great sea, which we often
meet with, the compass will traverse with the motion of the ship; besides
the ship may and will deviate somewhat in steering, even by the best
helmsmen: and then when you come to take an azimuth there is often some
difference between him that looks at the compass and the man that takes
the altitude height of the sun; and a small error in each, if the error
of both should be one way, will make it wide of any great exactness.


Pages:
101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125