Stemar
Well-Known Member
This.Get used to handling the boat on your own don't rely on having crew.
Not because you're Billy No Mates, but because that way, you can take along people who don't know what they're doing. You wouldn't be the first person to want crew to help handle the boat, then get out there and, when you rely on them, find they've no idea or sense.
In normal times, I'd agree with Crewseekers and local sailing clubs, but these aren't normal times. If the vaccines prove effective against the new varieties of covid, we may be getting back to some semblance of normality by the start of the season, but I wouldn't be holding my breath.
If you've got a rough idea, the best way to learn would be to do a Day Skipper Practical, but I guess that isn't going to happen for a while. If I found the boat I wanted, I'd watch a few Youtubes on parking your boat, then go out on a calm day and spend a few hours pontoon bashing, trying the different techniques. Then learn how the sails work on your boat, and try them, again, on a calm day. Once you're confident with them, it's time to actually start sailing. Oh, and you'll want a VHF licence, if you haven't got one.
The one tip I can give is ALWAYS think through what you want to do and how you're going to do it - and what's plan B if it doesn't work. What's the wind doing? What's the tide doing? How does my boat react in these conditions? How deep is the water, here, and over there? What about that muppet bearing down on me? - Or is he the stand-on, and I'm the muppet? After a while it becomes instinctive, but it isn't when you start.