ReedNavigation.com

Classes in celestial navigation and related topics
 

Modern Celestial Navigation

Winter / Spring 2026:
  • Register Oct 10,11 ATLANTIC session: 10am-4pm US Eastern time (1500-2100 UT), online.

A fast-paced introduction to celestial navigation from a 21st century perspective employing streamlined, practical, modern methods.

We cover Sun sights in detail, correcting sights for dip, refraction, and other details to determine a "position fix" in latitude and longitude. We'll use efficient, modern Sun data from the "guidebook" which you will receive as part of this workshop. We'll learn about the diurnal motions of the Sun and stars in different latitudes and seasons.

With everything you learn in this class and complete tables you will receive in class, you could navigate the oceans by sextant the very next day. This workshop covers the principle, use, and adjustment of modern sextants. You'll learn how to calibrate any sextant in just a few minutes to bring it to perfect working order.

Advanced Celestial: Position Fixes & Star Sights is recommended as a follow-up.

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:


Lee Schacter wrote:
A great course and teacher. Finally got my head around celestial navigation...
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
Dr. Russell D. Sampson wrote:
I took Frank's 19th Century Celestial Navigation class in April 2013 and really enjoyed it. Not only was the class interesting but my fellow classmates were too; a retired skipper of a ballistic missile sub, the son of the fellow who invented GPS, a teacher, a captain of a Panamax container ship and a fellow who crossed the Atlantic solo - twice!

The class was also a great resource for my teaching and my own research interests such as the visibility of celestial objects in the daytime (Jupiter and Venus) and the effects of astronomical refraction near the horizon. I hope to take more workshops with Frank.

Dr. Russell D. Sampson
Wickware Planetarium
Eastern Connecticut State University

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