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Boating Terms Commonly Used

By: K.Thomas

There are many terms used by boaters that are worth while in learning. This can be overwhelming for boaters just starting out.

Presenting to you now, is a basic comprehensive list of some of the top boating terms. Learn these and you are well on your way to becoming proficient in modern day sailer lingo.

Alot of these terms pertain to specific types of boats or ships. However,knowing their meaning is still a task you should not shirk. You can take an online boating course obout boating safety and find all of these terms.

1- Overboard - When you are in a boat on any body of water, what is outside of the boat or off of the boat is called overboard. If you fall into the water you have fell overboard.

2- The Bow - The boats forward section.

3- Starboard - Facing forward to the bow, on your right side would be Starboard.

4- Flooding - An incoming overwhelming force and volume of water, that could possibly sink the boat, if not stopped.

5- Cast Off - To let go, as in the boat leaving the pier.

6- Cabin - These are what the crew or passengers use to get out of the elements. Another word for this purpose would be compartment.

7- Port - The left side of vessel when you are facing the bow.

8- Abeam - is not on the boat, but at right angles to the boats keel.

9- Aboard - If you are with in or somewhere on the boat, you are aboard the boat.

10- Capsize - If your watercraft is flipped over for any reason, rather a rogue wave, or from being blown over from huricane gail force winds. It has capsized.

11- Tide - Due to the pull of the moons gravity, the water levels of the oceans rise at its strongest pull, and drops when it lessens. In port, the water will be deaper at high tide, and less deap at low tide.

12- Beam - The widest part of the boat is it's beam.

13- Flares - When a boat is in trouble, the use of emergency flares fired from a flare gun, is used as a distress signal; can usually show a boats location from miles at night.

14- Navigate - When you plot, chart and execute your boat trip, from one destination to another, you have nagigated a course.

15- Longitude - At the Greenwich Meridian in England going East or West for any distance is Longitude. Longitude is measured in degrees.

16- Bearing - The direction of a boat, either by its true bearing that the chart would show, or by its realitive bearing based on another object.

17- Below - Beneath the upper deck is the below decks, the lower decks.

18- Intracoastal Waterways - Inland waterways, rivers, canals, ajacent to the coasts that water vessels travel through with out going out to sea. Also called I.C.W.

19- Latitude - South or north distance from the Equator, measured by degrees.

20- Flooding - When incoming currents of water start to fill up the vessel, potentially causing the potential of the boat sinking.

21- Chart - Sailers, boaters, often use charts to navigate their voyages. They give the direction and location of various locations, making it easier to navigate to these destinations.

22- Tide - The oceans water levels rise and fall from the moons gravitational influence. When the tide is in, the water level is deeper. Some ships can not enter port unless the tide is in, for the water level would not be deep enough to keep them from bottoming out.

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There are many terms used by boaters that are worth while in learning. This can be overwhelming for boaters just starting out.

About the Author: K.Thomas gives you great boating tips online at Safety Tips On Boating and Cheap Boat Supplies Come visit now!

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