ricwoz
Member
A friend is flying from San Francisco to Delhi, India and then home via Newark. He said "I'm circumnavigating, kinda". And so we talked about that.
Circumnavigating is a big deal to a lot of sailors, and I know that there is a difference between using the short cuts of Panama Canal and Suez Canal and going via Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn.
Assuming you went with the two canals route, you aren't going the distance of a great circle, so it seems less than a full circumnavigation. If you sailed all the way around Antarctica you have circumnavigated Antarctica, and are a bad-ass, but you really haven't circumnavigated the world.
So what are the easy to state rules that make for a true circumnavigation? What are the rules for people seeking to break records in this category, and who maintains them?
I read the Wikipedia article, and it's not that great. In particular they show a route that includes two pairs of atnipodes? Why two pairs? Would not passing through a single pair of antipodes (while continuously moving in one general direction like East to West, be enough to ensure a full great circle length and legit circumnavigation?
Are there even simpler to understand rules (like crossing and re-crossing the equator while starting and ending in the same location) that people commonly use that I am unaware of?
Circumnavigating is a big deal to a lot of sailors, and I know that there is a difference between using the short cuts of Panama Canal and Suez Canal and going via Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn.
Assuming you went with the two canals route, you aren't going the distance of a great circle, so it seems less than a full circumnavigation. If you sailed all the way around Antarctica you have circumnavigated Antarctica, and are a bad-ass, but you really haven't circumnavigated the world.
So what are the easy to state rules that make for a true circumnavigation? What are the rules for people seeking to break records in this category, and who maintains them?
I read the Wikipedia article, and it's not that great. In particular they show a route that includes two pairs of atnipodes? Why two pairs? Would not passing through a single pair of antipodes (while continuously moving in one general direction like East to West, be enough to ensure a full great circle length and legit circumnavigation?
Are there even simpler to understand rules (like crossing and re-crossing the equator while starting and ending in the same location) that people commonly use that I am unaware of?