Two On A Big Ocean The Story of the First Circumnavigation
of the Pacific Basin
in a Small Sailing Ship


      

Other Books by
Hal Roth
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Re: Maskelyne et al


Subject: Re: Maskelyne et al
From: Dan Allen (danallen46@XXX.XXX)
Date: Wed Jun 11 2003 - 16:07:29 EDT


On Wednesday, June 11, 2003, at 11:42 AM, George Huxtable wrote:

> The man who knows most about the period on this list is Steven
> Wepster, who
> has written a dissertation on Mayer, and I hope he will correct
> anything I
> have got wrong.

Thanks George for the info; I'd love to hear more from Steven Wepster
about Mayer.

I think that there are two types of us on this mailing list: those that
simply want to learn celestial navigation fast and get on with it in
practice, and those of us that really want to know and understand all
of the theory behind things. I am in the latter category, and learning
about the history of navigation helps make the theory a bit more
interesting along the way, so I am all for these excursions into the
history of celestial navigation.

Having said that, I also enjoy the more practical side of things. I do
get out and actually need to navigate. I have just returned from a 5
day trip from Seattle up to Campbell River, British Columbia, about 200
nmi each way. I went with a friend aboard his 18' open boat up the
Inside Passage and it was a fabulous trip.

Dan





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