Why Do You Need a Personal Injury Lawyer Before Sailing to Los Angeles?

California is one of the highest states in the country for boating incidents, according to the California Department of Boating and Waterways. In a recent survey on California waterways, the drowning incidents recorded were about 74 percent of deaths. Many general rules surrounding boating safety are not followed in such situations. The waterways in Los Angeles can be dangerous and that is why you must be prepared for unforeseen events before you even start sailing. In case you get involved in an incident, you will need an experienced personal injury lawyer to defend you. 

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Boat Accidents

There are several ways someone can get hurt or killed while on the water. Boat accidents can occur for a variety of reasons but most of them are due to the owner's negligence. This is alarming when families with children come on a holiday and one member of the family gets hurt due to a boat mechanical failure or some other unfortunate accident. Boat accidents may occur on a simple boat cruise along several rivers or beaches in Los Angeles and often can be due to the boat operator's inadequate qualifications. 

Injuries

A boat and other personal watercraft such as jet skis and wave runners are considered vehicles under California law and have unique operating regulations. While certain activities particularly those involving more hazardous water sports, may require the tourist's consent before participating in any activity, in other instances the fault may be attributable to the person who rented the vehicle. If you're on a boat and are hurt as a result of carelessness or lack of responsibility from someone else you will need experienced personal injury attorneys to assist you. 

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Death 

To be seriously injured or to lose a loved one is never an easy thing to cope with. To have to deal with this is a stressful and challenging experience and there is no amount of financial gain that can replace a human being's life. Sorting out legal responsibility and monitoring insurance coverage in Los Angeles for boating accidents is something that can be accomplished with the help of an experienced accident lawyer who is familiar with boating and personal injury laws.  



Before you close the door behind you and make your way to the boat, make sure that you have considered everything on this list to ensure security for you and your family. It is important to note that you should have basic needs when sailing including food supply, drinking water, hygiene kit, medicines, and first aid kit. Likewise, Los Angeles has many rivers and water sports enthusiasts know how to enjoy all that nature has to bring.

Navigating Without a Compass by Night

After the sun sets, the stars come out! If you find yourself on a starry night without a compass, you are in luck!

During the day, you needed to set your watch to find North by using the hour hand on your watch, the “12” position on the face, and the knowledge of when “noon” occurs wherever you are on the Earth. By night, it is a lot simpler!

First, you have many stars in the sky which will tell you a wealth of information. One of the most important stars in the sky is Polaris, the North Star (which is the last star in the tail of the Little Dipper). This star is directly over the North Pole so if you draw an imaginary vertical line down to the horizon, that point is North.

Great, so if you want to go South, do you just turn your head around and keep looking back at Polaris?

Not exactly. Another useful constellation is Orion.

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I personally have trouble seeing the entirety of Orion, but I can always seem to find his belt, and that is the important part!

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The belt is easy to spot, as its three stars in an almost perfect line. The first start of the belt to rise above the horizon will rise over due East, and the last star to set in the belt and disappear behind the horizon will mark due West. These are handy because if you happen to spot the stars rising over the horizon, you can then have yourself a second cardinal point in the night sky (aside from North thanks to the North Star). Watching the stars set is easier in my opinion because you saw them all night and know where they are as they set instead of guessing which star is the first star of the belt to rise over the horizon.

While the belt gives you a direction at two small moments of the night, it does give you another good indication of South for the entire night. The “Sword” that hangs just below the belt is made up of what look like three stars, even though the middle one is actually a nebula. These three stars are in a perfect line and point roughly South.

I say roughly because there is a little wiggle room for error here. The “Sword” is most accurate when it is high in the night sky and perpendicular to the horizon. At this moment, South is a pretty well pointed area on the horizon. When the constellation is low to the horizon, like when it just rose or is setting, there is a bit of inaccuracy which makes it “roughly” South and not “due” South.

That said, if you don’t have a compass, being guided roughly South is better than

  1. Not knowing which way you are going at all

  2. Having to crane your neck around to see the North Star behind you

  3. Being lost at sea as you sail in circles

The stars will guide you as you voyage across the sea, but do plan on having a compass that is in fine working order so that you don’t have to rely on the stars as your only form of navigation!

Navigating Without a Compass by Day

Your rudder steers your vessel but your compass guides your vessel!

What would you do if your compass dies? The compass could fall overboard, get affected by strong magnets, or even spring a leak and lose all its fluid. Now what?!

With paper charts, you can run out your Dead Reckoning line to see what area of the world you are heading towards if you don’t alter course; but you still need a way to make sure you are staying on a course.

By day, you have the Sun to use for navigation. By night you have the stars to guide you in the darkness of the open ocean.

The Sun rises in the East and sets in the West, roughly. Throughout the seasons there are some declination fluctuations since the Earth spins on a tilted axis. This means that the Sun will rise and set slightly South of East and South of West if you are in the Northern Hemisphere, and slightly North of East and North of West if you are in the Southern Hemisphere. Suddenly, using it as a guide begins to fail as an idea.

With an analogue watch, you can roughly figure out which way is North and South, but you are going to need some help. On land, where watches are set according to local time, all you have to do is pull out your watch and look at it. The problem is that you are out at sea, traveling across timezones, so your watch is no longer set to “local” time. Your first step will be to figure out what time is “local”.

You will need to sit around and observe the shadows on your boat. Preferably look at the shadows of your stanchions or some other small pole on your deck. You want to keep track of the shadow it casts, as the shadow will tell you which way is North at that instant and when “Noon” occurs to set your watch to.

As the sun rises and makes its way to the highest point in the sky, the shadow of such a component on your deck will begin to shorten. At it’s shortest, the shadow will be pointing North (opposite if you are in the Southern Hemisphere) and the moment when the shadow is shortest is “Noon”.

This sounds simple in theory, but it will be tricky to do and your measure of “Noon” will be rather rough since the boat is going to be moving around in the seas. If you happen to have a sextant, this measure of noon will be much more precise because you can use the sextant to find the highest position of the sun in the sky! If you had a sextant though, you wouldn’t need all these other methods because you would already be navigating!! Moving on…

You guess roughly what time is noon with your shadow trick and now you have a lowly calibrated watch that tells you the cardinal directions and is not on time with any other watch in the world! Using the watch, you can point the hour hand at the sun and look at the face of your watch. Now draw an imaginary line that bisects the angle between the hour hand and “12” on the face. If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, the bisecting line will point South and the opposite position on the watch face will point North.

If you are in the Southern Hemisphere, the opposite will be true and the line between the hour hand and “12” will be your North and the opposite side of the face will be South.

Let’s try this out in the Northern Hemisphere. It’s 6AM and the sun just came up over the horizon. You point the hour hand at the sun and look at the face.

Three points are going to be told on the face: Sun is at “6”, “12” is directly opposite so “9” will be pointing South, while “3” will be pointing North.

Now it’s 10AM and the sun is higher in the sky. Sun is at “10” “12” is much closer to the hour hand, “11” will be pointing South as it is the bisecting point on the face between the hour hand and “12”, therefore “5” is North.

At Noon, the Sun is at “12” and so is “12”, so “12” is South and “6” is North.

At 5pm, the Sun is starting to get low to the horizon. Sun is at “5”, “12” is now farther from the hour hand and “2:30” (halfway between 2 and 3) will be pointing South and 8:30 will be pointing North.

This is a cool parlor trick, but if you are sailing East or West, you will have to recalibrate your watch for the new “noon” as you will be traveling across timezones and your timely compass will begin to waver in accuracy.

Why does this work? It’s rather simple actually. If you are in the Northern Hemisphere (and not too close to the equator as during the summer, the sun actually comes over the equator which would then put you into the “Southern Hemisphere Setting” even though you are still in the Northern Hemisphere) the sun will rise in the East, set in the West, and transit the sky South of your position. At any point in the day, if you are looking in the direction of the sun you are also looking in a Southern direction. At Local Apparent Noon, the Sun will be directly South of you and any shadow cast will point due North. Therefore, as the sun rises, by tracking it with the hour hand which moves along the face of the watch at the same speed as the sun moves across the sky, you can track it’s position. Since the sun will be South of you at Noon, when the hour hand is at “12”, the angle between the hour hand and “12” will be 0 and “12” will be pointing South while “6” will be pointing North.

This lets you track the day and the sun to maintain your moving compass rose that floats around the face of the watch relative to the hour hand and “12” position.

The end result is a crude compass that will allow you to maintain a relative course without steering in circles.Now, if these concepts are familiar to you then you probably already understand the relationship between the Sun, time, and your position on the Earth. You might lose your compass, but you definitely still have your sextant secured in a safe place because the Sun is your guide and you already understand how and why a Noon-sight works.

The Value of Technology

When out at sea, the most valuable piece of equipment on a yacht today is probably the GPS Chart Plotter, not the Compass.

GPS will give you your exact position with a range of error of a few feet! The GPS antenna on our AIS is so accurate that during installation it asks for the exact position of the antenna on the yacht to know the true space that the vessel occupies on the surface of the ocean!

GPS started off wonderful, a small screen would display your exact coordinates on the Earth. You no longer need a sextant to find your rough position and Dead Reckoning just became very obsolete! The readout lets you quickly know precisely where you are so you can plot them on a paper chart and figure out where you should go next.

Then someone thought about how they could make it even easier to do! Paper charts are big and cumbersome, so this was the next point to improve upon! GPS displays grew bigger and bigger to the point that maps could be visible on them, and eventually charts could be displayed on their screens. Now your position is instantly plotted on the screen in real time right before your eyes!

Navigating transformed from an art that takes practice to a video game where you steer your little boat shaped icon around on a screen. Avoiding rocks, buoys, and day markers suddenly became possible, even in the darkness of night or the blinding effects of thick fog. This is great for stationary objects that don’t move, but what about other boats on the same waterway?

AIS makes this possible, and even better it plots the other boats on your screen! Suddenly, sailing became a video game where you can steer blindly in any conditions, all you have to do is avoid the other dots on the screen!

This all sounds rather fantastical, but the sad thing is while we were in the Azores, I met another cruiser who luckily arrived after having some technical issues with one of his motors (on his catamaran). This cruiser carried no paper charts, only chart plotters. These large screens were very apparent in his cockpit area. When off they were huge black rectangles and when on they could serve as a flashlight!

The alarming part is he did not carry a compass.

If his electronics failed or if his ability to power electronics ran out, he had no paper charts to plot his position and calculate his course or to navigate by, and even worse, he had no compass to guide him.

Technology is awesome and it has made it possible for us to sail into completely unknown ports for the first time with confidence that we will safely anchor without bumping into anything! That doesn’t mean that technology should be revered above the tried and true simple tools of the past, like a compass.

Still in Lockdown

Our trip to Europe found us sailing into the Mediterranean and embarking on a fun winter excursion through the hills of the European continent…in a van!

Van life was the goal as we found ways to entertain ourselves away from the rough winter Mediterranean. We started our journey in early February, through Spain, France, and up to Belgium by March. We then visited The Netherlands, Luxembourg, Germany, and Austria!

Then the lockdown came and we found ourselves trapped in Austria for a few weeks while Corona Virus raged in the European Continent. That was mid March!

We are doing well and waiting for it to finally be safe to drive back to our boat in Spain but enjoying all the sights that Austria has to offer while we wait! The people are friendly and the food is delicious, so no complaints about where we got stuck from us here.