crown22
Well-Known Member
It's all in title really.
Which side of the coin are you looking atIt's all in title really.
That’s what your autohelm is for.Thanks guys.I suppose that I was thinking of the complete skillset needed to be a cruising yachtsman.By the way the best helmsman on my yacht in Mallorca had done a lot of dinghy sailing.His hands on the wheel were awesome.Lots of tiny moves on the wheel.Freeing me up to take in the big picture.Crews welfare hydration passage planning review etc.
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.That’s what your autohelm is for.
Seems a bit unfair as your boat is more dingy than yachtMost dinghy sailing involves racing. You don't need to be a top racer to sail a cruiser. You might need to be a fairly proficient racer to sail any boat well, or rather, the two skills are closely related. You don't need boat on boat tactics after all, but you do need wind and tidal tactics, or you'll sit there going nowhere fast, many times. You can learn those skills on a cruiser, but, due to the presence of the iron Genoa, lots of cruisers never do. We're about to do our 1st club race of the season, a run what you brung pursuit race. We will be treated to the spectacle of half the cruiser fleet sitting out in the tide, never to reach the leeward mark, as the wind forecast is very light. The bit we sail on to do that is marked green on the chart.
I think it depends what "other things being equal" really means.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