jdc
Well-Known Member
What works for one person won't necessarily work for another, so take our, and especially my, suggestions as only that: suggestions.
But I'm not sure I agree wholeheartedly about taking a course. It seems that there is implicit in this some striving for a 'right' way of doing things, and/or for doing everything to perfection. Sailing is a practical pass-time, and perfection is neither attainable nor the goal, nor would any 2 people agree what it constitutes anyway. Like playing cricket or sewing; mostly it goes ok, some things are sweet, sometimes you drop a catch or the thread snaps - ho hum.
What I suggest is for you both to do things slower and deliberately and systematically search out techniques which you find least stressful - sod what the books or courses say. Remember that almost anything on a sailing yacht happens at a walking pace with hundreds of metres of space around you, so there's no problem just stopping for a while. In the example you gave of rolling away the jib, how about not putting the engine on, or at least in gear, until it's all done? No stressful steering etc, just take your time. The boat might have drifted all of 100 yards in this time, hardly a big deal. You've probably got 30 minutes to spare and could even put the kettle on while just drifting - try it!
This experimenting together should be (i) confidence building, (ii) rather good for relationship building as it's a shared project and both will be learning, and (iii) will teach you as much as or more than a formal course would anyway! If you must have external instruction, consider own-boat tuition for you both as a team. Tell the instructor that you want to learn low-stress methods, not 'approved' or, heaven forfend, racing manoeuvres. It's probably cheaper as well as it need only be in small, eg half day, chunks.
But I'm not sure I agree wholeheartedly about taking a course. It seems that there is implicit in this some striving for a 'right' way of doing things, and/or for doing everything to perfection. Sailing is a practical pass-time, and perfection is neither attainable nor the goal, nor would any 2 people agree what it constitutes anyway. Like playing cricket or sewing; mostly it goes ok, some things are sweet, sometimes you drop a catch or the thread snaps - ho hum.
What I suggest is for you both to do things slower and deliberately and systematically search out techniques which you find least stressful - sod what the books or courses say. Remember that almost anything on a sailing yacht happens at a walking pace with hundreds of metres of space around you, so there's no problem just stopping for a while. In the example you gave of rolling away the jib, how about not putting the engine on, or at least in gear, until it's all done? No stressful steering etc, just take your time. The boat might have drifted all of 100 yards in this time, hardly a big deal. You've probably got 30 minutes to spare and could even put the kettle on while just drifting - try it!
This experimenting together should be (i) confidence building, (ii) rather good for relationship building as it's a shared project and both will be learning, and (iii) will teach you as much as or more than a formal course would anyway! If you must have external instruction, consider own-boat tuition for you both as a team. Tell the instructor that you want to learn low-stress methods, not 'approved' or, heaven forfend, racing manoeuvres. It's probably cheaper as well as it need only be in small, eg half day, chunks.
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