Situational Awareness

Situational Awareness

Three great ways to enhance your situational awareness

Situational awareness is the state of knowing what’s going on around you. In essence, it’s a combination of observation and orientation that can help you make better decisions and possibly save your bacon if things go really sideways.

Decades ago, GPS and digital cartography went a long way to improve our situational awareness of where we were on the planet. (For anyone who still remembers dead reckoning or celestial navigation, you know what I mean.) But understanding the environment and our place in it can always be improved. Here are three ways to better grasp exactly what’s ahead, behind, below, in the dark, and in heavy rain to take the stress out of boating.

SiOnyx Aurora Night Vision Camera

Running in low-light situations can be a challenge. Going fishing before the sun is up, entering a strange harbor at night or managing a man-overboard situation are tense moments when a night vision camera comes in handy.

Night vision technology works on either heat or light. Thermal cameras focus on heat sources but they don’t penetrate glass, so you can’t use them from inside a pilothouse. Other cameras amplify ambient light with differing degrees of success. A new take on night vision is the SiOnyx Aurora, a camera with an ultra-low-light infrared sensor that provides color vision in the dark. (You can use it in the monochrome mode as well, but the color really helps orient you.)

Weighing just under eight ounces and sized for easy onehanded operation, the $800 Aurora has three modes: Daylight, Twilight and Night. The first two amplify visible light while the Night mode uses an infrared sensor. The Aurora must be focused manually (due to the low light nature) and would benefit from a continuous zoom rather than a stepped click zoom. Backlighting on the function icons would be handy, too, as you switch between video, stills, and settings. Why use a flashlight to blow your night
vision just to change the mode?

You can pair the Aurora with iOS and Android devices to watch real-time images on their screens or record for later, and you can also control the camera from your phone. Waterproof to IP67 standards, the Aurora has a built-in GPS, compass and Wi-Fi capabilities and takes nice stills and video in bright sunlight. Best of all, you don’t need to step outside to use it because it works through the glass. Understanding what’s out there in the dark just got a whole lot easier.

sioynx.com

Simrad Halo 4 Radar

Nothing delivers magical “sight” like radar that sees through fog, darkness, and rain. Although radar isn’t new, there have been so many improvements on the basic concept that today’s systems almost seem like a bit of voodoo.

Take Simrad’s new Halo 4 that has a 64-nautical-mile range and simultaneously shows you what’s 20 feet ahead (with a 4-foot open array antenna). This solid-state pulse compression radar has a Dual Range mode so you can split the screen to view weather and vessels in the distance and upcoming channel markers at the same time. It can pick up a piling even as you nearly poke it with your pulpit because it has no “main bang” that blind spot created for in-close navigation due to the time delay between when each pulse starts and ends.

The VelocityTrack feature is a motion-tracking Doppler upgrade so you can watch storm cells, and the beam sharpening capability provides enhanced separation between small or distant targets. You can find birds with this radar, and where there are birds, there are fish.

A brushless motor and helical gear train ensure a fast, quiet operation so the updates are frequent and there’s no overhead buzzing. The Halo 4 is ready to go in fewer than 30  seconds from a cold start (versus the normal two minutes), and its emissions are so low that it’s been dubbed “huggable”. I’m not going to hug it, but I’m just saying you could.

simrad-yachting.com

Raymarine ClearCruise AugmentedReality (AR)

If you’ve ever strained your eyes searching for that buoy on the horizon and then tried to match it back to what you see on your chartplotter, ClearCruise AR is for you.

Supported by Raymarine’s CAM210 HD cameras and Axiom multifunction displays (MFDs), this augmented reality overlays navigation markers, automatic identification (AIS) traffic, and user-entered waypoints onto real-time high-definition video. At a glimpse, you know exactly which ship is heading your way and where to find channel markers leading to the harbor.

Color-coded labels provide identification, status and risk assessment for AIS targets and clearly show the number and color of that buoy bobbing in the hazy sun ahead. The AR200 video stabilization module includes a GPS/GNSS sensor and an attitude heading reference sensor (AHRS) so the labels move with your boat for easy heads-up recognition. The camera and stabilization module add about $1,200 to an Axiom MFD running Raymarine’s LightHouse 3.7 software, but once you’ve seen ClearView AR, you’ll wonder how you got along without it.

raymarine.com

By Zuzana Prochazka, Southern Boating January 2019

Crossing for a Cure: Cystic Fibrosis Awareness

Crossing for a Cure: Cystic Fibrosis Awareness

Crossing For A Cure is a long-distance endurance paddle challenge and international championship.

Paddlers will travel 80 miles across the Gulf Stream. This year’s event will begin Father’s Day weekend in Bimini and end in Lake Worth, Florida.

Travis Suit’s daughter Piper was only four years old when she was diagnosed with CF. He subsequently began the event to raise awareness and highlight the healing effects of the ocean on those living with cystic fibrosis.

After learning to paddle and surf as a fun and natural way of healing for Piper, Suit’s mission expanded in 2013 when he and three friends completed their first endurance paddle as a personal challenge to raise awareness for the cystic fibrosis community.  which has now evolved into a movement called Crossing for A Cure.

What is Cystic Fibrosis?

Cystic fibrosis is a progressive, genetic disease that causes persistent lung infections and limits the ability to breathe over time. Moreover, in people with cystic fibrosis, a defective gene causes a thick, buildup of mucus in the lungs, pancreas and other organs.

Mucus clogs the lungs and traps bacteria leading to infections, extensive lung damage and eventually, respiratory failure. Additionally, in the pancreas, the mucus prevents the release of digestive enzymes that allow the body to break down food and absorb vital nutrients.

“From paddlers to volunteers to boat captains, this is a monumental effort and it’s amazing to see so many people come together to challenge themselves and each other,” said Suit.

All participants try to raise a minimum of $1,500 for Piper’s Foundation, the non-profit set up by Travis Suit to support the families of the cystic fibrosis community. 100% of fundraising proceeds go directly to the Piper’s Angels Foundation.

Watch: Epic Love

“Epic Love” is a thirty-minute documentary film that follows the one hundred paddlers on an epic  2018 adventure. The documentary won top honors at the inaugural SUP Film Fest in 2018. The SUP Film Fest is the primary fundraising event for Paddle4Good, a Northern California-based non-profit that empowers those with special needs through standup paddling

The 2019 Event

This is a special year. With 225 paddlers and a fundraising goal of $500k, it’s on track to be the most epic paddle yet. For reference, the 2018 event raised over $282k with 100 paddlers. This year is special for Southern Boating as well. Two of our co-workers are guiding a group of paddlers across the Gulfstream as a support vessel.

“I love watching people get excited about this and spreading the positive message of making the most out of circumstances we face,” said Suit.

This year’s Crossing for A Cure is possible because of generous sponsors like title sponsors Bahamas Boat Works, Seacor Island Lines, and Surterra Wellness. Supporting sponsors include Margaritaville and Vertex.

The event concludes with an epic Landing Party on Saturday, June 14th at 10 Ocean Blvd, Lake Worth, Fl 33460, Lake Worth, Florida 33460. Paddlers will arrive anytime between 10 AM to 8 PM.  We’ll be there to support the cause and we have quite a few giveaways planned too. Don’t miss it.

For more information on donating, visit crowdrise.com/crossingforacure.

For more information on attending the landing party, visit the event’s Facebook page. 

By Erin Brennan, Southern Boating June 2019

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