Do ex dinghy sailors make good cruising yachtsmen?

As a cruising sailor I’d ask at what cost? A few more degrees, but can the crew still sleep? 1/2kt faster but can they still cook?

We don’t push the boat or the crew, it’s tiring enough just being out there for a day or two!
The point is that when it comes to heavy weather that speed and point normally come because the boat is flatter and more settled.
 
We don’t cruise in heavy weather! We’re sitting in a sunny port on the French coast right now waiting for the conditions to improve before leaving. French beer, wine, cheese, bread are all better than a face full of salty water 😎
 
I don't doubt that for a minute that racing is not a skill developer, just that it is not needed. Skills can be developed by anyone, at any time, if they are open to learning. I can usually be found sailing, light winds, onto and off my anchor, mooring, and practising MOB from time to time on passage, it's how I keep my skills up.
For sure it's not compulsory to race to develop skills. I was a perfectly safe and competent cruising sailor before I ever was a racer.

Didn't half accelerate my learning though. And what's more it keeps me interested in getting better. If I was "just" cruising, then the skill set I had 15-20 years ago was more than adequate. I could sail, navigate, moor in strong winds and tides etc. More than enough to enjoy being on the water and sailing from A-B.

But with a competitive streak, the incentive to keep improving, to move up the fleet, drives you to look at what's next.
 
We don’t cruise in heavy weather! We’re sitting in a sunny port on the French coast right now waiting for the conditions to improve before leaving. French beer, wine, cheese, bread are all better than a face full of salty water 😎
For sure, it's a leisure activity. Sort of making my point for me about what exposes you to experience more conditions and learn more though!
 
This must be another reason we fly past every cruising yacht we meet. Any dinghy sailor who can simply remain right side up can cane the arse out of an auto helm. They have their uses, but making good progress to windward isn't one of them.
And you are in your bar when we are 100 miles into the trip, upwind. Horses for courses but when it’s just one person on deck then spending the time watching, tuning and tweaking sails, eating and drinking means endurance is pretty much infinite and the boat gets there.
 
You don't have to be a good dinghysailorto be a good yachtsman, but all other things being equal a good dinghy sailor is going to be a better yachtsman than a non dinghy sailor because that is a skill and a familiarity with wind, tide, boat handling that the non dinghy sailor doesn't have
I entirely agree, except that I would narrow it down to the fact that a dinghy sailor will generally be better at sailing the boat and manoeuvring it than someone who hasn't sailed dinghies, but may be missing in other qualities that are needed at sea. These might include a certain caution, the willingness to take in the niceties of navigation, weather lore and administration, and the sort of personality that allows him or her to work with other crew members.
 
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