A private logbook for the water, kept inside Claude. Record every trip and passage in a sentence, track your ASA & US Sailing certifications, and watch the sea-time totals build toward bareboat, offshore, and a captain's ticket — with a weather eye on the wind before you cast off.
ASA 101–108 and the US Sailing keelboat track, plus endorsements — dates, schools, instructors, and a cert-path that shows exactly which rung comes next.
Trips & passages: vessel and rig, route, your role aboard, nautical miles, hours under way, night hours, weather, crew and notes — searchable later by boat, port or gale.
Running totals — miles, days, hours, days as skipper, night hours — broken down by role and by body of water, with the span of your whole logbook.
A plain go / no-go read for a daysail — wind, gust spread, wave height and the building afternoon sea breeze for any harbor, before you leave the dock.
of documented sea time stand between you and a USCG OUPV “six-pack” ticket (90 of them within the last three years; a day counts as 4+ hours under way). helm totals every passage the way the Coast Guard counts it — so the ticket stops being a guess.