Nice!
& good work, if that's all you?
I didn't realise OpenSeaMap was tied in to Marine Track?
I've been working on beaches the last few days, & wondering if I should
include the couple of artificial reefs that have been constructed just
(200-300m) off the shoreline?
Thanks
Graeme
On Thu, 30 Sept 2021 at 13:11, Ben Kelley wrote:
> Yes having fun:
> https://map.openseamap.org/?zoom=14=-33.50064=151.33839=BFTFFTF0TT
>
> We were discussing today how oyster leases should be marked for maritime
> mapping. We think probably a cardinal hazard marker (i.e. a hazard lies to
> the N/S/E/W of this marker) rather than the location of the hardware for
> growing the oysters.
>
> Of course the places where the oysters grow (sorry I don't know the
> technical name for this) are the easiest to see from an aerial photo. This
> is normally marked as aquaculture in OSM.
>
> The poles marking the hazard are visible on an aerial photo, but you can't
> tell from the photo which ones are hazard markers (and which direction) and
> which ones are just poles in the water.
>
> - Ben.
>
> PS 2019 Sea Doo GTR 230
>
>
> On Wed, 29 Sept 2021 at 11:29, Graeme Fitzpatrick
> wrote:
>
>> Yes, they're actually a "Special Mark", which can be used to mark
>> anything out of the ordinary.
>>
>> https://www.msq.qld.gov.au/Safety/Navigation-buoys-marks-and-beacons
>>
>> Have fun! (& what'd you get? :-))
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> Graeme
>>
>>
>> On Tue, 28 Sept 2021 at 13:37, Ben Kelley wrote:
>>
>>> I have recently moved close to Brisbane Water (NSW Central Coast).
>>> Aerial photos are quite good if you know what you're looking at.
>>>
>>> I think buoy_special_purpose is probably the closest.
>>>
>>> - Ben.
>>>
>>> On Tue, 28 Sept 2021 at 13:29, Andrew Harvey
>>> wrote:
>>>
I can't help much with tagging, but wanted to say good to see someone
else interested in sea mapping, I mapped a small bit of the Georges River
in Sydney via kayak many years ago.
On Tue, 28 Sept 2021 at 10:39, Ben Kelley wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I'm slowly mapping more and more buoys in my area. The red and green
> channel markers are obvious, but I wondered how to map yellow ones.
>
> I'm guessing that for Open Sea Map it is a "special purpose mark".
>
> Generally they are used to mark hazards. The channel runs close to
> moorings here, so there are yellow buoys between the channel and the
> moorings.
>
> Is anyone else into Open Sea Map? (We bought a boat last week :) )
>
> - Ben.
>
> --
> Ben Kelley
> ben.kel...@gmail.com
> https://mrebenezer.blogspot.com/
> This message was sent on my Atari 400
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>>>
>>> --
>>> Ben Kelley
>>> ben.kel...@gmail.com
>>> https://mrebenezer.blogspot.com/
>>> This message was sent on my Atari 400
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>>>
>>
>
> --
> Ben Kelley
> ben.kel...@gmail.com
> https://mrebenezer.blogspot.com/
> This message was sent on my Atari 400
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