Expedition tracking tools
Nov 15, 2024
🧠Navigation, Comms and Photography: Building a System That Won’t Let Me Down
There’s a temptation, when planning something like Britain by Kayak, to look for the perfect bit of kit.
It doesn’t exist.
What matters is something far more important:
a system with no single point of failure.
Out on the water—cold, tired, committed—you don’t want clever. You want reliable, layered, and predictable. Each piece of kit has a job. If one fails, another steps in.
This is the setup I’m trusting for BBK26.
⌚ Garmin Fenix 7 Sapphire Solar — The Constant Companion
This is the device I’ll use the most—and think about the least.
It’s always there. For BBK26, its primary role is to record my daily track, which uploads to Garmin Connect and Strava as soon as I save it. This lets those following the journey see what I’ve achieved each day, while also building a complete expedition track history.
It also provides key metrics—heart rate, calories, HRV, sleep—which are all vital in managing fatigue and informing decision-making.
Navigationally, it’s a useful backup if needed (for example, if I lose my GPS). At a glance it can give me:
- Speed
- Bearing
- Distance to next waypoint
- Whether I’m drifting off line
Battery life is impressive, and the solar charging helps extend it further—important on a long expedition.
📡 Garmin GPSMAP 86i — The Backbone
If I had to strip everything back to one device, this would be it.
Navigation. Tracking. Communication.
- Satellite messaging (inReach)
- Three preset messages (I’m starting; I’m finishing; I’m delayed but OK) sent to predefined contacts
- Additional editable messages within subscription limits
- Live tracking with a dedicated web link
- Global SOS capability
- Floats and includes a mini strobe
- Real-world battery: ~2–3 long days per charge
The 86i pairs with my phone, allowing messages to be sent and received more easily. Crucially, it works completely off-grid—no mobile signal required—so I can stay in touch and access weather forecasts wherever I am.
This is the device I’ll rely on when it matters—long crossings, poor visibility, committing decisions.
…But it’s not cheap to buy or to run!
📻 Icom IC-M25 EVO — The Human Connection
Satellite comms are brilliant—but they’re not immediate.
VHF is.
This is how you:
- Call harbour control
- Speak to nearby vessels
- Raise a distress call that gets heard now
Local, instant, human communication.
In reality, my VHF will stay switched off most of the time to conserve battery, coming on when needed.
🚨 Ocean Signal rescueME PLB1 — The Red Button
No menus. No signal issues. No subscriptions.
Flip the antenna. Press the button.
It sends a distress signal via the global Cospas-Sarsat system.
No nuance. No conversation.
Just: I need help. Now. You can find me here.
Single-use activation, but with a 7-year battery life.
It lives clipped to the outside of my buoyancy aid shoulder strap—always accessible.
🚀 Rocket-Man!!!
In case it gets really serious, I’m also carrying:
- 1 Ă— rocket parachute flare
- 1 Ă— orange smoke flare
Both are stored in my buoyancy aid pocket.
📱 iPhone 15 Pro Max — The Thinking Tool
The phone is powerful—and waterproof to 6m. It lives in my buoyancy aid front pocket on a lanyard.
Aside from obvious communication, it provides a third layer of redundancy for satellite rescue.
Its day job is:
- Plan routes (Savvy Navvy)
- Sync and manage data (Garmin Explore)
- Check weather and tides
- Capture photos and short clips
- Edit content for social media
- Phone my wife
The Camera Factor
This is also my primary storytelling tool.
- 48 MP main camera
- Ultra-wide + telephoto
- Strong low-light performance
It captures:
- Quiet camp moments
- Big coastal landscapes
- The small details that tell the real story
🎥 GoPro HERO13 Black — The Reality Camera
If the iPhone captures the story, the GoPro captures the experience.
I run it in three ways:
- Front deck (track-mounted with 1-inch ball mount)
- Rear deck (700mm carbon camera mount, facing forward past the cockpit)
- Handheld
The rear deck angle is particularly effective—it shows movement, rhythm, and the water flowing under the boat.
I can start recording instantly with a single button press, or control it via a remote mounted on my paddle shaft.
This is where the GoPro excels:
- Surf launches and landings
- Rough crossings
- Wet, chaotic moments
🗺️ There’s Paper, Too!!!
It’s not all electronic.
I’m backing everything up with a modified road atlas—yes, really.
- All inland pages removed
- Only coastal sections retained
- Scale: ~45 mm to 10 km
Each page can cover a day or two of paddling.
I annotate it with:
- Tidal races
- Shipping lanes
- Military ranges
- Lighthouses
- Potential contacts and hosts
It gives a simple, reliable, big-picture overview—and somewhere to think and plan without a screen.
đź§ Passage Planning & Traditional Navigation
Each day starts with a written passage plan.
Even when tired, this forces me to:
- Consider conditions
- Structure decisions
- Commit to a clear plan
On the reverse is a quick reference for wind speeds and sea states.
Backing everything up:
- Suunto deck-mounted compass
- “Sawn-off” Silva compass in my buoyancy aid
Simple. Reliable. Always on.7
đź§ The System (Not the Gadgets)
This isn’t about owning lots of kit.
It’s about covering different failure points:
- Wrist navigation → Fenix
- Primary nav + global comms → GPSMAP
- Local comms → VHF
- Emergency beacon → PLB (plus iPhone backup)
- Planning + storytelling → iPhone
- Action capture → GoPro
- Written passage plan + compasses
- Annotated road atlas
Each piece overlaps slightly. None are identical.
That’s deliberate.
Because out there, the goal isn’t efficiency.
It’s resilience.
Final Thought
By the time I set off, I don’t need a perfect system.
I need a system that works well enough—
and keeps working when I’m tired, cold, and a long way from an easy exit.
That’s the standard everything here has to meet.