
ምረጽ ሓደ ቦርሳ ንፋስ ዝሓልፍ እሱ ነው ይቅነስ ይልቅ ከመደበኛ ቦርሳ እና ውሰድ ይት ዊዝ ዩ ኦን ኤቭሪ ሌግ ኦፍ ዘ ትሪፕ:: ኪፕ ዚዝ ፓክስ ላይት ኤንድ አክሰሲብል ፎር ኩዊክ ሾር ቪዚትስ::.
ዋኒኻ ትኽድንኻን ንዋትካን ተቐምጦ፡ ብኣቀማምጣ ጃልባን ወደብን ይወሰን፣ ስለዚ፡ ነቲ ኽትኽእሎ እትኽእል ንጹር ኪት ኣዕሽግ። ይመርምሩ ጨረታ ከመቅረቡ ወይም በረራዎች. የታወቁ መስመሮች ሲኖሩ፣ እነዚህ መመሪያዎች ይስተካከላሉ ልዩነት ሁኔታዎች ልትጋጠሙህ ትችላለህ።.
ልብሶች: 4–5 ጐይታடுப ዽዩማሑ።, 2 ዋና ልብሶች, ቀላል የንፋስ መከላከያ, 1 በግ ፀጉር, ናሁ። መንፈሳዊ ዸሕሪ ሱሪታት. አምጣ ይቅነስ ፎጣ ፈጣን ደረቅ የሚሆንና ለመጥለቅ ክፍለ-ጊዜዎች የሚሆን ዋና ልብስ፣ ከዚያ የንፋስን ወይም የውሀ ሙቀቶችን ትንበያ ይመልከቱ።.
መሣሪያዎች እና ደህንነት፡ የጸሐይ መከላከያ SPF 30+ ውኃ የማያስተላልፍ፣ ሰፋ ያለ ጠርዝ ያለው ባርኔጣ፣ የፖላራይዝድ ሌንሶች ያሉት መነጽር፣ ውኃ የማያስገባ የስልክ መያዣ እና የታመቀ የመጀመሪያ እርዳታ መስጫ። የባሕር ሕመም ማስታገሻዎችን፣ ትንሽ የጥገና መሣሪያን እና አንድ ቦርሳ ደረቅ ንኤለክትሮኒክስ ኣቕሑት ንምክልኻል። ናይ ስኖርክል መሳርሒ እንተለካ፡ ማስክኻን ክንፊኻን ሒዝካ ክትመጽእ ትኽእል ኢኻ፤ እንተዘይኰይኑ ግና ኣብቲ ቦታ ክትከራየካ ትኽእል ኢኻ።. ይመሰል ማንኛውም መርከበኛ፣ ከመነሳትህ በፊት ምንም ግልጽ የጎደለ ነገር አለመኖሩን ለማረጋገጥ ይህን ኪት ተመልከት።.
Snorkeling እና የውሃ እንቅስቃሴዎች፡ ለአስኖርክሊንግ እርስዎ ይችላል ግልባጭ፣ ቧንቧና ክንፍ ይዘህ ና፤ ያንተ ከሆኑ፤ ካልሆነ በቦታው ተከራይ። ሪፍ-ሴፍ የጸሐይ መከላከያና ማይክሮፋይበር ፎጣ ያዝ። አነስተኛ የማይበሳ ቦርሳ ለክብሮችና የታመቀ ፎጣ የፀሐይ እረፍት ይዘህ ና።.
ቲኬትን በተመለከተ፤ ቅጂዎቹንና የጉዞ ዋስትና ሰነዶችን በመያዝ፤ ዲጂታል ቅጂዎችን ደህንነቱ በተጠበቀ ክላውድ ላይ በማስቀመጥ፤ የወረቀት ቅጂዎችንም ደረቅ በሆነ ከረጢት ውስጥ ማስቀመጥ ያስፈልጋል። የመለዋወጫ ካርድዎን እምነት ከሚጣልባቸው የክፍል ጓደኛዎ ጋር ያስቀምጡ፤ የመርከብ ኩባንያውን መስፈርቶች ያረጋግጡ፤ እንዲሁም ትንሽ የአከባቢ ገንዘብ ይዘው ይሂዱ። በተቻለ መጠን ውድ ዕቃዎችዎን በመርከብ ላይ በሚገኝ ሣጥን ውስጥ ያስቀምጡ፤ ማንነትዎን የሚያረጋግጥ ሌላ ካርድ ከእርስዎ ጋር ይያዙ፤ ካርድዎ ቢጠፋ እንዳይቸገሩ ይጠቅማል። እንደ ቅዱስ እና አንድ ታዋቂ መርከበኛ እና አስፈላጊዎቹን ነገሮች ብቻ ይዘህ ቀንስ።.
መዝናኛና ተጨማሪዎች፡ ጥቂቶቹ ጨዋታዎች ወይንም የመጫዎቻ ካርዶች ከሚታደስ የውሃ ጠርሙስ፣ ትንሽ ማስታወሻ ደብተር እና እስክሪብቶ ጋር በቀን ከረጢት ውስጥ ይገባሉ። እነዚህ ትንንሽ ነገሮች በመርከቧ ምሽቶች ላይ ያለውን መጨናነቅ ይቀንሳሉ፣ ለመታሰቢያ የሚሆኑ ቦታዎችን ያስለቅቃሉ። እዚሁ እንዲሁም በመካከል ደሴቶቹ። ከልጆች ጋር የምትጓዙ ከሆነ፣ በሚቆሙባቸው ቦታዎች መካከል ልጆቹን ለማዝናናት ጥቂት ቀላል ጨዋታዎችን ይያዙ። የት ሃሩግኻ ትግታ።.
የኃይል አስተዳደር በDeck ላይ፡ የባትሪ ባንኮች፣ ቻርጀሮች እና የኃይል መሙያ እቅዶች
ክምክክል'ቲ ባትሪታት ክልተ ባትሪታት፦ ክልተ lithium packs 12V፣ ነፍሲ ወከፉ 100Ah፣ ምስ ዝተተሓሓዘ BMS፤ ብማዕረ ኣተኣሳሲርካ ጠቕላላ 200Ah ምግባር ምስ 60A AC-DC ቻርጀር ምትእስሳር። ንነዊሕ ጉዕዞ ሓጽርቲ ኬብላት ምጥቃም ነቲ ዝወርድ ቮልቴጅ ንምጉዳል ዝተሓለዉ መተኣሳሰሪታት ምጥቃም። ኣብ ዝተሃወሃሰን ደረቕን ቦታ ምሽፋንን መለለይ ኣገባብ ምግባር። እዚ ኣገባብ እዚ ኣብ ግዜ ምግፋፍን ነዊሕ ርሕቀት ክትጓዓዙ ከለኹምን ይሕግዝ።.
በውቅያኖስ ላይ በሚጓዙበት ጊዜ በዴክ ላይ ጊዜን ለመስጠት የኃይል መሙያ እቅድ ያውጡ፤ ወደብ ሲደርሱ የባህር ዳርቻ ኃይል፣ በቀን የፀሐይ ኃይል፣ ሞተሩ በሚሠራበት ጊዜ የሞተር ተለዋጭ። ጆን እና ሉሲያ በኮክፒት ውስጥ የሚታይ እቅድ እና ከእያንዳንዱ እግር በኋላ ዝማኔዎችን ያደንቃሉ። እንደ አሰሳ ማሳያዎች፣ ሬዲዮዎች እና መብራቶች ያሉ መሳሪያዎችን በመጠቀም ኃይልን ለማመጣጠን አጠቃላይ የጭነት መገለጫ ይረዳዎታል፣ እንዲሁም ፓስፖርት፣ መለዋወጫ ፊውዝ እና ኬብሎችን በተጠበቀ መያዣ ውስጥ ማስገባት አለብዎት። ፎጣዎችን እና ቀዝቀዝ ላሉ ምሽቶች ሞቅ ያለ ሹራብ እንዲኖርዎት ያድርጉ እንዲሁም መደበኛ ወደብ ዳር ዝግጅት ላይ ልብስ ለብሰው ይሁኑ ወይም ተራ ልብስ ለብሰው በቀላሉ ጥገና ለማድረግ የሚያስችል ተጨማሪ ጫማ በዴክ ላይ ያድርጉ።.
ክትትል SOCን ጊዜን ለመሙላት። አስገራሚ ነገሮችን ለማስቀረት የተሟላ እቅድን እና በጊዜ ላይ የተመሰረቱ ኢላማዎችን ይያዙ። ብዙ ሃይል የሚጠይቁ መሳሪያዎችን ከመብራት በተለየ ቅርንጫፍ ላይ ያስቀምጡ እና ወሳኝ ሲስተሞችን በረዥም ጉዞዎች ላይ በከፍተኛ ቅድሚያ በሚሰጠው ባንክ ላይ ያካሂዱ። የዕቅድ ሉህ ይጠቀሙ፡ ጫናዎችን ይዘርዝሩ፣ የሚቆይበትን ጊዜ ይገምቱ እና የኃይል መሙያ ሁኔታን ይከታተሉ፤ SOC ከ50% በታች ከወረደ፣ በመጀመሪያ ወደ ባህር ዳርቻ ወይም የፀሐይ ግብዓት ይቀይሩ።.
| ክፍል | ዝርዝር መግለጫ | ማስታወሻዎች |
|---|---|---|
| የባትሪ ባንኮች | 2x 12V LiFePO4, 100Ah ஒவ்வொன்றும்; மொத்தம் 200Ah | BMS na'inra; nala'an; ayi ta'uka dayi 25–28 kg pa pack. |
| Charger options | 60A AC shore charger; optional 60A DC-DC | Absorption/float stages; temp sensor recommended |
| Solar option | 2x 200W panels; MPPT 60A controller | Projected daily yield 1.6–2.2 kWh with 4–5 sun hours |
| Typical loads | Navigation display 4–6A; autopilot 1–2A; lighting 2–4A; radios ~1A | Night run current 8–12A; adjust by priority |
Weatherproofing Gear: Dry Bags, Waterproof Cases, and Lens Protectors
Sure, pack dry bags for every stash of gear and label them by size: 5–10 L for clothes, 15–20 L for towels and spare layers, and a compact 1–2 L pouch for electronics to stay light and dry on deck. Here is a practical approach: keep a dedicated dry bag near the hatch for quick access during daily moves onboard.
Store your passport, cards, and backup cash in a waterproof case; place this near the helm or in a weatherproof locker to take with you during short port calls. Having the case ready saves time during shore visits.
Protect cameras with lens protectors and keep spare filters in a small padded pouch; rinse lenses with fresh water after snorkeling, then dry before packing.
In a virgin stop along a maarten and saint route, having reliable dry storage saves money and keeps your experience smooth; plan a double‑bag setup for valuables, keep a spare lens protector, and if someone falls sick, sealed bags protect meds and tissues.
Camera Kit for Sea Photography: Bodies, Lenses, and Stabilization
Always choose a weather-sealed mirrorless body and keep a second body ready for on-deck opportunities. Pair two bodies to avoid lens swaps in spray, and store them in a dry bag inside the onboard facilities. Bring extra batteries and high-capacity memory cards; evenings on deck offer gentler light for quick reviews, so you need reliable power. If your booking takes you toward barbados or virgin routes, pack a hooded lens hood and a compact rain cover to shield the front element. For safety, bring medicine and prescription details in a waterproof pouch, and share the plan with john if someone feels sick. Dress for the deck with footwear that grips and lightweight layers; maybe you’ll shift from sun to wind in the evenings. Keep a compact item bag for small accessories like filters, lens cloths, and spare cables. This setup enhances your experience.
Bodies, Stabilization, and Handling
Choose bodies with in-body image stabilization and robust weather sealing; pair this with stabilized lenses for the most flexible setup. A small monopod helps when the deck pitches, and a hooded lens hood reduces glare on saltwater reflections. The most versatile pairing is a high-resolution body paired with a versatile zoom (24-70mm) and a longer tele (70-200mm or 100-400mm) you can swap depending on the subject. Onboard practice after docking or during calm evenings lets you lock focus modes and refine exposure, so you take control of every shot instead of chasing light.
Lenses and Accessories

Lens choices should cover both wide scenes and distant subjects: pair a 24-70mm with a 70-200mm; add a 100-400mm for far boats, birds, or distant fishing actions when they appear. All lenses should be weather-sealed, with a hooded front to resist salt spray. Carry a macro option (60–100mm) for close details on rails or deck fittings. Use a polarizer to manage glare and a neutral density filter for long exposures at dusk. Keep memory cards in labeled, quick-access pockets and bring spare batteries; consider a dry bag for gear if seas turn rough. For sharing the experience, shoot RAW and back up files during evenings, and keep a copy near where you booked accommodations so you can review them after docking.
Data Backup Strategy: Memory Cards, External Drives, and Cloud Sync
Back up all new footage and data to three places within 24 hours: memory cards in the camera, a pair of rugged external drives, and cloud sync configured for automatic backups. This three-copy approach minimizes loss from card failure, drive damage, or connectivity gaps.
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Memory Cards
- Choose SD/SDXC cards with U3 or V30 ratings, 64–256 GB each, to handle high-bitrate photos and video. Bring at least four cards, and rotate them so one stays in reserve. Keep them in a protected, waterproof case and label each card with date and content (including trip name). Check data integrity on a separate reader before formatting the card back into service.
- For trips to kitts or other remote anchorages, store a spare card in a small, breathable pouch that stays dry inside your clothing bag; this keeps data protected even in rough weather. Your prescription for data safety is to copy to two cards and run a read-back test after each day.
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External Drives
- Use rugged SSDs 1–2 TB each with IP67 protection or higher. Maintain a pair and rotate them between locations (cabin and locker) to prevent a single loss. Bring spare cables and keep drive letters or identifiers consistent to avoid confusion. Format and verify checksums after every major transfer, and label drives with the date and content snapshot.
- Store drives in a safe, shock-absorbing case and consider a second enclosure for waterproof protection when sailing to far-off ports like john’s favorite harbor or kitts. Having two drives reduces risk of mission-critical data loss over years of voyages.
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Cloud Sync
- Enable automatic cloud backups with end-to-end encryption and MFA. Choose a plan that provides at least 2–3 months of history in case you need to restore from an earlier version, and ensure you can perform a test restore quickly. Schedule nightly sync so data arrives while you sleep, and keep offline copies on a local drive for quick recovery when internet is slow or unavailable.
- Keep in mind that cloud sync is a safety net, not a sole solution. If your crew is casual, you still gain peace of mind and can recover their work quickly, especially when you’re at sea or visiting an island like kitts. This approach can save you money by avoiding data loss fees and avoids stressing your crew during sick days or weather delays; you can restore most files with a couple of clicks.
- Best practices include test restores every few weeks, maintaining consistent folder structures (photos, videos, logs), and using checksums to verify file integrity after every transfer. For quick reference, maintain a simple log of what was backed up, when, and who performed the backup.
Quick workflow you can adopt: take 15 minutes at the end of each day to copy new data from memory cards to the pair external drives, then trigger cloud sync. If you need a quick breather, pour a cocktail and review the transfer log with your team. With this routine, your data stays protected for years, and you reduce the risk of losing critical information on long trips. john and their crew will appreciate the safety net when plans change or weather turns rough, and you’ll feel quite confident that your files are safe even if a device fails. Bring spare cables and keep a careful record of what was backed up, so their experience remains smooth even during busy passages.
Onboard Mounts and Handling: Tripods, Brackets, and Quick-Access Storage
Choose a compact marine-grade tripod kit with locking legs and a quick-release head. Pair it with a rail clamp designed for yacht rails. Mount it on a side deck post or cabin-top track within arm’s reach so you can grab a camera, a handheld light, or a small instrument without reaching over the rail. This setup saves much room and speeds access during look-out, docking, or shore visits.
Opt for a bracket system that tolerates spray and fits a limited footprint. Select one with a shallow base plate and multi-directional adjustability so you can position a light, a chart viewer, or a compact display without blocking winches or controls. Keep everything on a single, simple list so the crew can find what they need fast.
For quick-access storage, use a shallow waterproof pouch near the helm and a dry box in the companionway. Store manuals and documentation in a labeled pouch and keep a spare microfiber cloth, a small power bank, and spare cables in zip bags. Use packing inside a dedicated compartment to keep everything within easy reach during a cruise or sailing leg. These steps reduce clutter and save time for the guys.
Guidance from the captain helps tailor the setup to your yacht and company needs. Before every voyage, run a quick check: are all mounts secure, are cords stowed, is there a backup plan for rain or spray? Having a defined routine helps you bring the right gear and avoid fishing around for items on a rolling deck. This applies to every crew member and keeps the theme of safe, efficient handling on every trip.
For casual cruises, don’t overpack: keep the list lean and pick only what you truly need. Bring a sweater for cool evenings, and stash a compact bottle opener or cocktail napkins in the dry box to cover the cocktail hour. If your yacht has a pool deck, consider a small bracket near there for a camera or phone. These tips help you find everything you need fast, without crowding space, with much room left for the rest of your packing.