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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Water sports & recreations > Boating > Sailing
Part of the Clyde Cruising Club's Sailing Directions and Anchorages
series, Firth of Clyde extends beyond its titled area to the coast
of Northern Ireland (Rathlin Island to Belfast Lough) and on the
Scottish side southwards from Stranraer to Portpatrick and beyond
to the Solway Firth and Cumbria. Firth of Clyde covers everything
from the busy waters of the Firth of Clyde and River Clyde to the
more remote areas of the wider estuary and connected lochs,
including the protected and beautiful Kyles of Bute and Loch
Riddon, Loch Fyne and the Crinan Canal. Coverage then extends west
and south to encompass North Channel and Solway Firth. This new
edition, updated by Geoff Crowley, continues the long-respected
legacy of CCC publications for cruising sailors. The North Channel
section has been extended to include details for Belfast itself.
New photographs throughout illustrate the text and help orientate
the navigator. Details on plans have been updated with reference to
the new Imray 2900 Firth of Clyde chart pack for the area.
References to Bob Bradfield's useful Antares large scale charts are
also included. Whether you are a local sailor or a first-time
cruising visitor, Firth of Clyde is an essential companion in these
waters. Updates and corrections are available via the Clyde
Cruising Club website as below. Includes free mobile download:
Imray Digital Charts for West Britain and Ireland.
Far to the north of Russia, across the cold waters of the Barents
Sea, lies the desolate archipelago known as Franz Josef Land.
Hidden away still further to the north and west of those islands is
one of the most inaccessible and least known seas on this planet -
the Queen Victoria Sea. In his fifth book of voyages, Roger Taylor
describes his successful attempt to sail singlehanded into those
lonely and usually icebound waters in his largely self-built and
engineless yacht Mingming II. On the way he weathers the most
northerly point of the Svalbard islands before sailing due east
along 81 DegreesNorth to the north-west coast of Franz Josef Land.
Pack-ice would normally render such a route impossible. This
voyage, which linked the endpoints of Taylor's two previous Arctic
voyages to the north-west and north-east of Svalbard, marks the
culmination of nearly fifty years of small-boat ocean sailing.
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