Showing posts with label boating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boating. Show all posts

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Boating Pics



A "Midden" on the shore of Sandy Island Marine Park near Comox. A Midden is a collection of shells left on the shoreline at the site of an old First Nations Village. They ate a lot of clams, oysters, and so on, and the discarded shells remain to this day. The shells sound quite crunchy under foot when you walk up the beach.

The old and the new at anchor in Tribune Bay on Hornby Island. An expensive motor yacht and a replica of a "Tall Ship". The Tall Ship was full of teenagers. A beautiful beach at Tribune Bay.









Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Saved $200

I was out on the boat about a week ago, just a shakedown cruise to see if I still remembered how to do stuff and to see if everything still worked. I discovered that my handheld GPS had lost the ability to track satellites. Not a good condition for a GPS machine!

We use it when crossing open water and are still too far away to see with binoculars. It saves time steering straight to a destination. It is also handy to have if there is a little fog and you can't see destinations that would otherwise be visible. In addition, the GPS tells us how fast we are travelling and estimates our trip time. Its not a necessity - just a nice little luxury to have on board.

I got out the manual and tried everything they recommended but got nowhere. I talked to a shop that sold new ones and they suggested that the software may be obsolete for communicating with satellites. This sounded like a reasonable explanation. I checked the Magellan site on the net and determined that they stopped making my model 310 about 4 years ago. I priced new ones and they started at close to $200.

As a last resort I called the 1-800 number for Magellan, half expecting them to say it was too old and obsolete, but to my surprise they gave me instructions over the telephone that cleared the memory. These instructions were not in the manual. This worked like a charm and the little guy now tracks 8 or 9 satellites, more than I ever recall seeing last summer.

Sometimes us frugal guys get lucky and get to keep the old stuff going for a while longer.

If I'm ever looking for a new GPS I will certainly start with Magellan.

ps Always keeping one eye on the market... I see that the DJIA is primed to make a break out above the last peak. I also see, that it took 7 years for it to recover completely from the bear that started back in 2000.