rotrax
Well-Known Member
I consider it appropriate I keep schtum....!![]()
+1!
I consider it appropriate I keep schtum....!![]()
possible source of problem could be the RYA and there initial dinghy sailing training courses .... exacerbated by the RYA's approach to instructor training particularly the sailing skills they look for in people wanting to become senior instructors .... as what I found that they were looking for when I went on senior instructor pre course day was people with really good racing sailing skills, seamanship skills did not come into the day at all ...
PP
Close quarters handling does not seem to be well taught. My wife and I passed both Dayskipper Theory and Practical without being taught much more than how to tie up against a long jetty.
The Day Skipper syllabus only specifies being able to park alongside a pontoon, or at least my instructor told me she'd give me the certificate provided I could do that, even if I couldn't park in a marina berth.
That said, we did do marina berth parking quite a lot, and everyone had come in and out of a marina berth by the end of the week [and I said sorry to the boat I hit].
Perhaps it comes down to who's running the course.Close quarters handling does not seem to be well taught. My wife and I passed both Dayskipper Theory and Practical without being taught much more than how to tie up against a long jetty.
I wonder if you are mixing two sports?Come on chaps (and chappesses) you are letting the side down!
Perhaps it comes down to who's running the course.
I know at out sailing club (dinghy) a lot of time during RYA L2 is spent comming alongside under sail and that PBL2 also has a lot of emphasis on close quarters handling. It might be that the PBL2 at the club is geared towards manning the safety boat which does require very good close quarters control hence the emphasis placed on it.
The rudest and most unpleasant skipper we have encountered in getting on for 30 years of cruising was an RYA instructor .....
Knowledge of sea terms and parts of a boat, her rigging and sails, sail handling, ropework, fire precautions and fighting, personal safety equipment, man overboard, emergency equipment, meteorology, seasickness, helmsmanship, general duties, manners and customs, rules of the road, dinghies
There used to be a section in the practical course syllabus on manners and customs back in the mid to late 1980s. It focused on coming alongside, asking permission, passing lines under others loops, rafting up, asking permission to cross a yacht; pretty sure it also addressed noise levels and discussed that a crew may be resting because they would be leaving early. I cant remember if it was in the CC or DS practical course but I am sure that item, which had to be signed off in the RYA log book, was pulled from the syllabus around the early 1990s.
I wonder if you are mixing two sports?
Yacht racing is a bit like F1 racing and has no reality to the real world and rather boring.
Were the "pit crew" on the pontoon ready to guide the racing machine in, tend it, wipe the drivers brow and set it off again?
Not at all, they were weekend sailors in oldish 32' (there's a clue there!) cruiser/racers coming into the normal visitor berths (another clue there too!) in a marina. Perhaps if there had been pit crew they may not have made such a hash up of getting the boats tied up... but it still wouldn't have excused the disregard for other people a couple of crews nearest to me displayed. Perhaps they had delusions of grandeur and thought they were serious racers...
The Day Skipper syllabus only specifies being able to park alongside a pontoon, or at least my instructor told me she'd give me the certificate provided I could do that, even if I couldn't park in a marina berth.
That said, we did do marina berth parking quite a lot, and everyone had come in and out of a marina berth by the end of the week [and I said sorry to the boat I hit].
In defence of instructors, I thinks this illustrates the dilemma they face when teaching berthing alongside. Whilst all students would naturally like to get plenty of practice at maneuvering in tight situations before going it alone, those of us with boats in marinas might not be so keen if it was our boat in the adjacent berth!
A pontoon - perhaps a longish one - with no other boats in close proximity allows many of the skills to be taught without risk to others' pride and joys. It can be approached (and left) with the wind blowing you on; blowing you off; at right angles with a 90 degree turn at the last minute to simulate a finger pontoon etc. Students can also be told to aim to stop alongside at a specific point - as for when berthing between boats on a long pontoon, or bow in alongside a finger pontoon.
Better still, of course, is a finger pontoon with no boat in the adjacent berth. They're not always available though...
As to the OP - I find it amazing that people can be so rude and inconsiderate. We're all capable of making mistakes, but the least we can do is apologise / cough up (if necessary) when we do.
I can see the theoretical truth in that, but in our case we went back to the same sailing school and booked a day of own boat tuition when they gave us another of their instructors who spend the day teaching us "bump and grind" as the school administrator described it. We had so many fenders out that it would have been impossible to do any damage!
Yes. But then it was your boat and presumably, therefore, your problem and your insurance policy if any damage was caused!
Rather than sailing schools experienced people at my club are always willing to go out for a day or two and instruct on picking up moorings, Man Overboard, reefing, going alongside pontoons etc.
It may not get a certificate but it's a good start; I think this combined with a night school navigation class and some playing in dinghies then reading is all most people need.