PUBLIC
COURSES
Boat Smart Course: This is a four-evening introductory
class in boater education. Instruction is free; however, there is a charge
for the materials which include the certificate of completion for those
passing the exam. This certificate satisfies the State of Oregon's requirements
for boater education. Classes are offered in the spring and fall or as
interest requires.
Basic
Boating Course: This is a 6-week, in-depth class in boater education.
Instruction is free; however, there is a charge for the materials which
include the certificate of completion for those passing the exam. This
certificate more than satisfies the State of Oregon's requirements for
boater education. Classes are offered in the spring and fall.
MEMBER
COURSES
Member Courses are divided into three types - Advanced Grades, Electives
and Learning Guides. The advanced grades are designed to be taken in sequence
after Boating, beginning with Seamanship and progressing through Piloting,
Advanced Piloting, Junior Navigation, and Navigation.
ADVANCED GRADE COURSES
Seamanship
(S): Building on the basics taught in the Boating Course, Seamanship is
the recommended first course for new members, both power boaters and sailors.
Students learn practical marlinespike; navigation rules; hull design and
performance; duties 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.
Piloting
(P): This is the first of a two-part program studying inland and coastal
navigation. It focuses on the fundamentals of piloting - keeping track
of a boat’s movements, determining your position at any time and
laying out courses to a planned destination. Included are such subjects
as: charts and their use; aids to navigation; the mariner’s compass;
variation and deviation of the compass; plotting and steering courses;
dead reckoning; and plotting and labeling charts.
Advanced
Piloting (AP): This is the final part of the inland and coastal
navigation series. It emphasizes the use of modern electronic navigation
systems and other advanced techniques for finding position. Among topics
covered are: tides and currents and their effects on piloting; finding
position using bearings and angles; simple use of the mariner’s
sextant; and electronic navigation - radar, loran, GPS, etc.
Junior
Navigation (JN): This is the first of a two-part program of study
in offshore (open-coast) navigation. It is designed as a practical, how-to
course, leaving the theoretical and more advanced techniques for the Navigation
Course. Subject matter includes: basic concepts of celestial navigation;
how to use the mariner’s sextant to take sights of the sun, moon,
planets and stars; the importance and techniques of accurate time determination;
use of the Nautical Almanac; how to reduce sights to establish lines of
position (LOPs); and the use of special charts, plotting sheets and other
navigational data for offshore positioning and passage planning.
Navigation
(N): This is the second part of the study of offshore navigation. It further
develops the student’s understanding of celestial theory. The student
is introduced to additional sight reduction techniques and develops greater
skill and precision in sight taking, positioning and the orderly methods
of carrying on the day’s work of a navigator at sea. Included is
lifeboat-navigation, using minimal data or equipment.
ELECTIVE COURSES
Engine Maintenance (EM): This course deals with basic
design and construction, operating principles maintenance and repair of
gasoline and diesel engines. Various systems - fuel, electrical, cooling
and lubrication - are studied. The purpose of this course is to make the
student more resourceful - not a mechanic.
Sail
(SA): This course teaches terminology, types of rigs and hulls, signals
and rules of the road, theory of sailing, balance of hull and sails, stability,
true and apparent wind, points of sailing, handling, anchoring, mooring,
and docking, laying up and fitting out.
Marine
Electronics (ME): This course contains essential knowledge about
a boat’s electrical and electronic systems, including wiring, grounding,
electrolysis, batteries and their care. Also covered are depth finders,
marine radio telephones, radar, Loran, GPS, and other electronic positioning
systems.
Weather
(W): This course teaches an awareness of weather phenomena, how to read
a weather map and the sky, and how to understand and anticipate weather
developments. The atmosphere and its characteristics; global weather and
other factors that affect forecasting are studied as well as clouds, air
masses, fronts, storms and fog.
Cruise
Planning (CP): This course encompasses the data from all of the
courses as applied to planning for and actually going on a cruise. Topics
include equipping a cruising boat; selecting the crew; provisioning; managing
a voyage; clearing foreign ports; emergencies afloat; and security measures.
LEARNING
GUIDES
In addition to the above instructed courses, members may study topics
in self study programs. They range from Knots, Bends, and Hitches through
Compass Adjusting, Amateur Radio, Skipper Saver, and Navigational Astronomy.
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