Tranona
Well-Known Member
This is precisely the point that I am making. You will see that there are no compulsory safety equipment requirements for private leisure craft.
This thread is about whether another state can impose any of their regulations on you, to which the answer is normally no, providing you are not breaking any of their other laws or the general laws of the sea to do with navigation. The Solas V requirements are about behaviour not equipment and are also universal.
The RYA provides guidance for what you have to do if you visit a foreign country, which is of no concern of the MCA - which is why they do not give advice. Everything is in the public domain - UN Convention and UN Resolution 14/40 are the main sources. However, the RYA on behalf of members collates all the information, represents all of us in the development and implementation of rules and laws that affect us such as the upcoming E Borders and proposed implementation of the drink/sailing law. They may not achieve what we want, but they are our represenatative body. Therefore not unreasonable that detailed information is only available to members who pay for them to do the work.
Actually I have summarised all the key principles on at least 3 threads in the last year, but always I refer to the "official" RYA advice, which is well explained on pages 17-19 of the autumn members magazine.
And the RYA is not a "company" but a members organisation, funded by members.
This thread is about whether another state can impose any of their regulations on you, to which the answer is normally no, providing you are not breaking any of their other laws or the general laws of the sea to do with navigation. The Solas V requirements are about behaviour not equipment and are also universal.
The RYA provides guidance for what you have to do if you visit a foreign country, which is of no concern of the MCA - which is why they do not give advice. Everything is in the public domain - UN Convention and UN Resolution 14/40 are the main sources. However, the RYA on behalf of members collates all the information, represents all of us in the development and implementation of rules and laws that affect us such as the upcoming E Borders and proposed implementation of the drink/sailing law. They may not achieve what we want, but they are our represenatative body. Therefore not unreasonable that detailed information is only available to members who pay for them to do the work.
Actually I have summarised all the key principles on at least 3 threads in the last year, but always I refer to the "official" RYA advice, which is well explained on pages 17-19 of the autumn members magazine.
And the RYA is not a "company" but a members organisation, funded by members.