ReedNavigation.com

Classes in celestial navigation and related topics
 

Celestial Navigation in the Age of Sail

Winter / Spring 2026:
  • Register Mar 7,8 ATLANTIC session: 10am-4pm US Eastern time (1500-2100 UT), online.
  • Register May 4,5,6 PACIFIC session: 8pm-11:45pm US Eastern time (0100-0445 UT next calendar day), online.

Navigate like the crew of the Charles W. Morgan! A fast-paced, two-day introductory workshop in the history and practice of celestial navigation in the Age of Sail. Examining original logbooks and notebooks from the Morgan's voyages we'll apply these same methods to modern navigation. By the end of the weekend, you'll have all the tools you need to sail by the Sun and stars across any ocean. And we'll follow a historic whaling voyage of the Charles W. Morgan across the Pacific, a voyage filled with intrigue: an unknown illness, a captain's resignation, and a mutiny, and port calls on tropical islands and the snowy north of Japan.

In this class, we'll learn how to use and adjust sextants. We'll become experts in the classic method of finding latitude by "Noon Sun". We'll also cover in detail the "equation of time", the "analemma", and the mysterious math of longitude ... mysterious on day one, easy by the end of this two-day workshop! Throughout, we will compare what we're doing with actual logbook entries and calculations in the collections of Mystic Seaport Museum, bringing historical documents to life.

This is real navigation, not just a class "about" navigation. Fast and intense, students who complete this workshop will have the basic celestial navigation skills to cross any ocean using the Sun, a sextant, and a few other simple tools, drawn directly from New England maritime history.

All workshops: $ 149 per person, per workshop

Created and taught by Frank Reed, celestial navigation and astronomy consultant on the team that found Shackleton's "Endurance" in 2022. Also a recent guest expert in celestial navigation on Neil deGrasse Tyson's StarTalk on The National Geographic Channel.

If you're registered for an online workshop, you're invited to attend hour-long sextant practical sessions in Rhode Island and Connecticut scheduled as weather and other factors permit. These live, in-person sessions are included in your registration for online classes.

Comments:


Lucinda Fleeson wrote:
"Celestial Navigation in the Age of Sail" was exactly what I was looking for to familiarize myself with historical marine navigation. Frank is an engaging instructor who weaved the story of a 19th century whaling voyage into hands-on practical calculations. He started by unveiling an incomprehensible historical document filled with numbers and promised that by the end of the course we could decode the figures. He's developed a step-by-step teaching method that is a marvel to watch and experience.

I must admit I dreaded two, back-to-back, 5-hour days, but the time sailed by. (Sorry can't resist.) Thank you.

He also included some 17th century data that I needed. I'm neither a mathematician nor a sailer, but a journalist and author.
Greg Rudzinski wrote:
The online class "Lunars: Finding Longitude by Lunar Distance" was a very interesting introduction to the esoteric history of lunars as practiced at sea in the pre chronometer 18th century tall ship era. Practical instruction was also done demonstrating the physical process of observing a lunar with a sextant followed by a how to lunar sight reduction example using a pocket calculator, formulae, and tables. A very rewarding experience.

Greg Rudzinski
Retired Merchant Mariner
SUNY Maritime class of 80
Doug MacPherson wrote:
I recently took online versions of Frank Reed's "Celestial Navigation in the Age of Sail", and "Lunars - Finding Longitude by Lunar Distances". I couldn't have been more happy with them. Having originally learned post WWII celestial methods as an officer in the United States Navy, and taken it up as a hobby, I was quite familiar with that era's procedures. However, I was intrigued by how they managed prior to then. Frank's two classes filled that void. His vast knowledge of the subject, both the technical aspects of the work as well as the historical significance were perfectly balanced. These are classes that can be thoroughly enjoyed by both the novice as well as the well versed practitioner. Recipe's for doing the work, the science behind those recipes, and actual voyages by the sailors that practiced the art were all presented with wonderful clarity. If "time sights", "cleared lunar distances" or "apparent time" have ever roused an interest, you owe it to yourself to take one of Frank's classes.

Doug MacPherson
Lieutenant, USN sep.

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