flaming
Well-Known Member
Surely the difference between them is the standard that it achieved...? I'm not sure how you make 2 courses about skippering yachts massively different, other than by the differing outcome levels? You're still sailing the same boat on largely the same water and the weather you get is just luck.No, I showed how the RYA descibe them (basically the same) and described my lived experience as a customer (they were IDENTICAL).
If you're not even willing to consider feedback then you should probably leave the thread. If someone in my team represented our organisation like this on a public forum they'd be speaking to HR.
For example, was the MOB done to a higher (under sail) standard? Were the berths selected for coming alongside less straightforward? Were the passages selected a little more complicated in execution - maybe going to places that are not all tide for example?
You may not actually notice this of course, as your own skill level and experience rose....
When all's said and done, the only thing that really separates the skill level of a newly qualified DS to a newly qualified YM is the size of their comfort zone and the slickness that their manoeuvres are done with. Things that are outside a new DS's comfort zone, for example getting off a berth with 30kts pinning you on, or sailing onto a mooring buoy, or entering a slightly complicated harbour at night ought to be within the YM's comfort zone.
The DS will get away with some slightly bumpy landings in coming alongside that the YM would not, will get away with passage planning that is much more "buoy hopping" will be expected to take decisions not to sail when the YM would be expected to sail.
The coastal skipper course completion is somewhere in between.