ylop
Well-Known Member
SWMBO has a notion to do a flotilla holiday next year, most likely for 1 week in early July, and ideally (for me) in Croatia as its an area I fancy visiting. So other than finding the funds to achieve this it sounds like a good idea.
I know that years ago almost no qualifications were required for this sort of trip, but that now the owners of very expensive boats have woken up to this risk. So here is a quick resume:
- Dinghy sailing experience, on and off for 25+ years. Including cruising dinghies, anchoring, passage planning etc (in the days before GPS too!).
- Powerboat experience over a similar period, but particularly in the last 10 yrs. Including RYA PB2 / ICC*. Cruising relatively long distances over several days, experience in marinas, anchoring, passage planning. Driving boats from 4-11m. Mostly outboard/sterndrive stuff - but way back I did some displacement stuff with shaft drive and rudder.
- Dayskipper THEORY.
- VHF SRC Certificate.
- A couple of days on a yacht as crew about 18 years ago.
* That ICC is for power driven vessels, so I presume not what is needed here.
Research suggest that most places will be looking for Dayskipper Practical / ICC. Now looking at Dayskipper it is a 5 day course. In contrast the ICC is less than a day "test". Now, I've looked at the ICC syllabus and am confident I could pass it in a powerboat or a wayfarer sized boat just by turning up - but realise that a 35ft yacht might need some practice. However I would hope it doesn't need 5 days of practice. Are there options to either accelerate Dayskipper for people who can sail and passage plan, but just need to deal with the scale? or do schools regularly run 1 days "ICC refresher" type training before the ICC exam?
A perfect solution is probably a 2 week holiday with the first week under instruction. However even if funds allow I am not sure SWMBO and I are ready for 14 days in such a confined space with the kids! Talking of which they will be 9 and 13 and both have some dinghy experience, and a little playing in powerboats. SWMBO on the other hand likes the journey/destination part of boating but has never shown much inclination towards the learning part. If I thought she would embrace the learning part then I might just go for instruction for the week.
Anyone got any experience to share:
Oh, and finally two members of the party are Coeliac, so unable to eat Wheat without consequences that would be most unpleasant on an enclosed Yacht! We've had good experiences finding GF food in Italy, does anyone have any comments on that in Croatia or Greece? and is it likely to be complicate being part of the flotilla?
Thanks in advance...
I know that years ago almost no qualifications were required for this sort of trip, but that now the owners of very expensive boats have woken up to this risk. So here is a quick resume:
- Dinghy sailing experience, on and off for 25+ years. Including cruising dinghies, anchoring, passage planning etc (in the days before GPS too!).
- Powerboat experience over a similar period, but particularly in the last 10 yrs. Including RYA PB2 / ICC*. Cruising relatively long distances over several days, experience in marinas, anchoring, passage planning. Driving boats from 4-11m. Mostly outboard/sterndrive stuff - but way back I did some displacement stuff with shaft drive and rudder.
- Dayskipper THEORY.
- VHF SRC Certificate.
- A couple of days on a yacht as crew about 18 years ago.
* That ICC is for power driven vessels, so I presume not what is needed here.
Research suggest that most places will be looking for Dayskipper Practical / ICC. Now looking at Dayskipper it is a 5 day course. In contrast the ICC is less than a day "test". Now, I've looked at the ICC syllabus and am confident I could pass it in a powerboat or a wayfarer sized boat just by turning up - but realise that a 35ft yacht might need some practice. However I would hope it doesn't need 5 days of practice. Are there options to either accelerate Dayskipper for people who can sail and passage plan, but just need to deal with the scale? or do schools regularly run 1 days "ICC refresher" type training before the ICC exam?
A perfect solution is probably a 2 week holiday with the first week under instruction. However even if funds allow I am not sure SWMBO and I are ready for 14 days in such a confined space with the kids! Talking of which they will be 9 and 13 and both have some dinghy experience, and a little playing in powerboats. SWMBO on the other hand likes the journey/destination part of boating but has never shown much inclination towards the learning part. If I thought she would embrace the learning part then I might just go for instruction for the week.
Anyone got any experience to share:
- what are the essential qualifications?
- best (easiest) way to get the relevant qualifications?
- Any specific skills that I should be focussing on outside of just getting the right certificate?
- Any particularly good companies to go with in this situation?
- Any particularly good locations/boats etc (or ones to avoid)?
- For a little "comfort" are a family of 4 really looking at a 6 berth boat?
Oh, and finally two members of the party are Coeliac, so unable to eat Wheat without consequences that would be most unpleasant on an enclosed Yacht! We've had good experiences finding GF food in Italy, does anyone have any comments on that in Croatia or Greece? and is it likely to be complicate being part of the flotilla?
Thanks in advance...