Uricanejack
Well-Known Member
I agree with those who say that the courses don't match their experience of yachting. I too am a family sailor (or was!), and skills in short-handed sailing would be far more useful than crew management. When I looked at the Competent Crew handbook, for example, it assumes that the neophyte sailor would be joining a yacht as if it was a completely separate world. In fact, the vast majority of us sail on yachts that are the family holiday; we all know each other and have long-established routines! And husband and wife (or equivalent) are probably a far more common crew than 5 or 6 able-bodied persons. When I did my ICC I was very struck by this - the examiner was willing and able to act as crew and having an active and competent crew member made a great difference to my ability to handle the boat! Things I would have been reluctant to do with my wife alone became easy; things I would never have tried with my wife as crew became possible The courses probably ought to consider and practice how a weak crew can handle the boat. MOB for a person left alone by the MOB would be very useful judging by the numerous threads on that subject!
Of course, own-boat training can overcome these deficiencies by presenting the instructor with the actual situation the trainee will be in! But even then, simply having a competent person present alters the dynamics; you know that there is someone who knows what to do if it all goes pear-shaped!
Admittedly, when you say RYA. Yachtmaster springs to mind as a generic term. Which is a pretty high requirement for a typical family sailing.
I can see, a YM is probably overkill for the average husband and wife. So probably most don’t bother.
Whats the problem with competent crew or day skipper?
The Day Skipper is a basic sailing course, By it’s nature, it has to be quite generic, It’s intended as a starting point. Some people taking the course will be starting from scratch, others may have been sailing or boating in some other way for years.
To be a basic entry level, it’s got to include very basic beginner entry level content.
Reputedly they are a pretty good way to start.
I suppose private tuition could be better tailored and. suited to your particular needs or choices. But what’s the standard?
My understanding is the RYA is a governing body, setting a standard. Which individual sailing schools schools use to creat a sailing course. Which contains a standard level of knowledge and practice.
So what do you expect? The answer i would expect is what it says on the box.
A competent crew. Be a useful crew member who can assist you on an average sail boat.
A Day Skipper, To be safe taking a friends or family out sailing for a day on an average sailboat somewhere familiar.
From there as you gain experience you can progressively take on more, eg sail a small boat by yourself. Or go further and stay out later, sail over night
What do you get out of it ? Hopefully some useful knowledge, experience and confidence. Plus you can say to someone, Hey I have RYA and they know what it means.