There's a reason ASA courses still teach sailors how to practice navigation without GPS. Chartplotters can malfunction while you're out at sea, and a dead battery shouldn't mean a lost crew.
Sailors who can grab a handbearing compass and plot a position using coastal landmarks have a skill set that no equipment failure can take away.
In this guide, you'll learn how to track your position with dead reckoning, take compass bearings, read coastal landmarks, and keep your estimates accurate on the water.
Dead reckoning is the oldest and simplest form of navigating without GPS, and a natural starting point for anyone learning.
The concept works like this:
It won't be pinpoint accurate, but the estimate improves with repetition. Keep a detailed paper logbook with every heading change and speed adjustment.
A three-point fix is one of the most reliable ways to find your way without electronics. Here's how it works.
Grab a handbearing compass and take magnetic bearings on three known objects visible from the cockpit and marked on the chart.
Lighthouses, headlands, prominent church towers, and radio masts all work well. Plot those bearing lines on the chart. The point where the three lines intersect is the boat's position.
If they form a tiny triangle instead of a single point, the boat's location is somewhere inside it.
Here are a few pointers for getting the most out of this technique:
This technique is called triangulation, and it's been keeping sailors on course for centuries.
Transit bearings are one of the most satisfying navigation tricks to practice. Line up two fixed, charted objects so one appears behind the other from the cockpit.
As long as those two objects stay lined up, the boat is on that line of position. The moment either one drifts out of alignment, the boat has moved off course. It's instant feedback without touching a single piece of electronics.
Sometimes, three landmarks won't be visible at once. Maybe there's just one lighthouse on the horizon and nothing else.
Take a bearing on that single object. Then sail a set course and distance, and take a second bearing on the same object from the new position.
Combining those two bearings with the distance traveled produces an estimated position on the chart.
It takes more math than a three-point fix, but it's a technique worth practicing for passages along less populated stretches of coastline.
Terrestrial navigation depends on matching what's visible on the horizon to what's printed on the chart. That sounds obvious, but it's trickier than expected when the bow is pitching, and the coastline is unfamiliar.
Start by scanning the surroundings and comparing them to the paper chart. A church tower on the starboard side might be easy to spot, but confirming it's the correct one on the chart takes a rough awareness of the boat's general area.
Some nautical charts and sailing guides include drawings or photographs of distinctive coastal features.
Lighthouse directories describe the appearance, light color, and flash pattern of each beacon. At night, those flash patterns become the primary way to orient yourself along the coastline.
The more orientation points involved in a position fix, the more reliable the result. Work with what's visible and refine the position as better landmarks come into view further along the passage.
Practicing traditional navigation doesn't require expensive gear. Just make sure to keep these stowed in the navigation station:
The whole kit fits in one bag and costs less than a chartplotter screen replacement.
Even with solid technique, a few variables can pull position estimates off the mark.
Wind drift is one of the biggest.
Sailing upwind means more lateral movement than the compass heading suggests. Gauging that drift comes down to experience, boat type, and the current sail plan.
Tidal currents also push the boat sideways.
Nautical publications for each sailing area list tidal current data, and factoring that into dead reckoning plots tightens up every estimate.
The best way to calibrate is to run traditional navigation alongside GPS during practice passages.
Compare the analog estimate to the electronic reading and track how close each dead reckoning plot lands.
Compass bearings and chart plotting make a lot more sense when you're practicing them on a 40-plus-foot yacht.
Sailing Virgins' ASA 103 course teaches chart reading, basic navigation, and weather interpretation over seven hands-on days.
The ASA 104 course adds passage planning and independent yacht handling.
ASA-certified instructors run both courses during actual on-the-water passages. Browse Sailing Virgins' 2026 course calendar and book your destination!