LadyInBed
Well-Known Member
Which bit of the UK coast were you sailing along?All good in theory, but I had one horrendous trip that should've taken no more than 12 - 14 hours that ended up taking 28.
Which bit of the UK coast were you sailing along?All good in theory, but I had one horrendous trip that should've taken no more than 12 - 14 hours that ended up taking 28.
Not quite the same situation then, as nowhere to pull in to for the night! There are ports to pull in to around Lyme Bay and East of the Bill.Not along, across. I misjudged the tides, there was an adverse wind shift and I was trying to get home in time to make a flight to the USA. Murphey intervened BIGTIME.
Not quite the same situation then, as nowhere to pull in to for the night! There are ports to pull in to around Lyme Bay and East of the Bill.
I once left Dartmouth after the regatta into an Easterly F4 I kept going and it built to a good 5 (I was in a 22 footer). I realised that I would miss the tide for the Bill and it wouldn't be very nice in those conditions so I diverted to Lyme Regis and tied up along the wall, then continued the next day when things had settled.
Although it appears you've got your heart set on JOG type adventurous racing, don't forget the benefit of sailing the Sonata as a One-Design.
The class is still very active and if you do well in the class racing, it means you are doing well on any scale.
If you do really well in the Sonata class racing, it means you are world class.
Get in with the class, and you'll find there' are often ways to borrow a trailer to get to the Nationals, etc. Copy what the good sailors do, and when you get to be level pegging with the National Champion, then look for something to give you the competitive edge. Until then, copy and learn . . . copy and learn, etc.
There is however the Mini-Ton Cup in September at the Island Sailing Club.