|
USPSŪ Advanced Grades
Program
Below
are the course descriptions followed by the dates they start and
an e-mail button specific to each course. If no start date appears
with a course then it is not
currently
scheduled.
To
get further information or to register for ANY of the BBSPS
courses, contact Peter
Moon (BBSPS
Education Officer) at (508)
- 563- 9569 (days) or by clicking on the e-mail button for
the class(s) you are interested in taking.
Seamanship
(S)
Building
on the basics taught in the USPS boating courses, Seamanship is
the recommended first course for new members, both powerboaters
and sailors. The student learns practical marlinespike, navigation
rules, hull design and performance, responsibilities of the skipper,
boat care, operating a boat under normal and abnormal conditions,
what to do in various emergencies and weather conditions, nautical
customs and common courtesy on the water. This course provides an
introduction to the USPS educational program and a strong foundation
for the other Advanced Grades courses and/or Cruise Planning or
Sail.
Piloting
(P)
Piloting
introduces you to the fundamentals of piloting and positioning --
the study of marine charts, aids to navigation, adjustment and use
of the mariner's compass, dead reckoning, planning and plotting
courses, and taking bearings to determine your on-the-water position.
Advanced
Piloting (AP)
Advanced
Piloting builds on the knowledge gained in Piloting to teach you
how to navigate safely in coastal waters -- predict tides and tidal
currents and their impact on your position, advanced positioning
techniques, and the use of electronic navigation systems for positioning
and course planning
Jr.
Navigation (JN)
Junior
Navigator begins your study of offshore (open-ocean) navigation
-- integrated electronic positioning systems, sight taking with
a mariner's sextant on the sun, moon, planets, and stars, how to
reduce sights using the nautical almanac to determine your position,
and passage planning with special open-ocean charts.
Navigation
(N)
Navigation
further develops your understanding of celestial navigation theory
and your skills in sight taking and reduction -- additional sight
reduction techniques and the orderly methods of carrying on the
day's work of a navigator at sea. Of particular interest and importance
is the study of offshore navigation using minimal data and/or equipment,
such as when on a disable vessel or lifeboat.
|