i need an icc course help please

Who had you booked the DS

I was going to do it with a company in puerto pollensa , I have asked them for new pricing for doing icc course ,but they have not replied to my mail so thought I would look elsewhere , good job I did , it's my own fault for not shopping around and also not knowing what I really wanted.

Well you are on the right track now. You always were needng the 24m ICC based on the size boat you have been looking at. You could do the DS shore based course on line. I would also ask whatever school you use to add the VHF radio course to the quote as well. You will need it and it an extra day.

Good luck, but if I can be of any further help pm me.
 
Well you are on the right track now. You always were needng the 24m ICC based on the size boat you have been looking at. You could do the DS shore based course on line. I would also ask whatever school you use to add the VHF radio course to the quote as well. You will need it and it an extra day.

Good luck, but if I can be of any further help pm me.

David, I am going to Palma via the uk , need to see the folks and my company , maybe we could do it in the uk!
 
Oh no, it'll be:

"David? Yes, David? No I meant the other David. David, Yes, No, What? David, I'm talking to David..."

...all day long. :D:D
 
Is RenegradeMaster (aka Suncoast) still running his school at Duquessa (south Spain)
His location is just inside tidal waters so you would get the full ICC - no tidal endorsement

David (Solitaire)
Ever thought of doing some training at Sant Carles?
There are a few here who would probably like some own boat training and ICC etc.
Maybe we could get some contacts through the SCM bertholders forum.
 
Is RenegradeMaster (aka Suncoast) still running his school at Duquessa (south Spain)
His location is just inside tidal waters so you would get the full ICC - no tidal endorsement

David (Solitaire)
Ever thought of doing some training at Sant Carles?
There are a few here who would probably like some own boat training and ICC etc.
Maybe we could get some contacts through the SCM bertholders forum.

PM sent
 
dilemma ,your thoughts please

ok i have have two sea schools to choose from with the right course .my dilemma is this .

one school charges approx 900 euro per student including the boat for the 3 day course. the dilemma i have is the boat they use is a (game 47) a sort of open sport fishing boat (sorry i dont know the term to explain it )

the other school is 33% more expensive but they use a phantom 40 , a flybridge cruiser .

my instinct tells me that the more expensive course and boat would give me a better understanding of how thing feel , something more akin to the type of boat i will eventually buy . so my question is, is it worth paying more for a better boat to train on , or am i just being stupid and of course i should just pay for the cheapest as the experience would be just as good ?

many thanks
david
 
My advice would be choose your instructor not his/her boat.

Woodie and JTB also advised me to use a med-centric instructor for my refreshers as they know lots of local tips. They really appreciated that knowledge when preparing for their YM.
 
My advice would be choose your instructor not his/her boat.

Woodie and JTB also advised me to use a med-centric instructor for my refreshers as they know lots of local tips. They really appreciated that knowledge when preparing for their YM.

well thats not easy , both schools are in mallorca, and also how would i know if one instructor is better than another? is there a list of good and bad instructors that i can refer to , both of the instructors of course are rya quailified .
 
well thats not easy , both schools are in mallorca, and also how would i know if one instructor is better than another? is there a list of good and bad instructors that i can refer to , both of the instructors of course are rya quailified .

Find out who the instructors are, and ask for feedback here.

Cheers
Jimmy
 
and also how would i know if one instructor is better than another?
By asking on here if there are recommendations? Would concern me x10 times as much compared to which boat in your position. What is their style etc. I prefer a strong character, others are different.
is there a list of good and bad instructors that i can refer to ?
Unsurprisingly, No. You may also be surprised that there does not appear to be a list of Bad Pupils ;)
 
Find out who the instructors are, and ask for feedback here.

Cheers
Jimmy

hi jimmy , i just dont think that comparing one instructor by name to another is a very nice thing to do on an open forum , my question was more to do with would i be better to do my training on a boat which is a flybridge cruiser, or something which is more like a giant totaly open boat with a helm like a big ribs,

thanks
david
 
hi jimmy , i just dont think that comparing one instructor by name to another is a very nice thing to do on an open forum , my question was more to do with would i be better to do my training on a boat which is a flybridge cruiser, or something which is more like a giant totaly open boat with a helm like a big ribs,

thanks
david

You need to make your mind up. I was responding to your question 'how would i know if one instructor is better than another?', which you asked in response to EME's point 'My advice would be choose your instructor not his/her boat.', which I completely agree with.

I think you need to decide what you want to achieve with this training - either you want a good general grounding in boat handling, nav, and local procedures. Or, you want to do all this and also get an idea about the sort of boat you're talking about buying.

In both cases you want to pick the right instructor. In the latter case, you need to charter something similar to the boats you've been referring to. I'm not certain that there's a sufficient parallel between say a Phantom 40 and a Squadron 58 to say that doing the course on a Phantom 40 is representative enough of larger flybridges to give you a good enough flavour.

At the risk of sounding a bit blunt, trying to save a couple of quid here and there on the ICC course doesn't really square with your plan of buying a 20m flybridge; if you are serious about this as your first boat, you should be chartering one, and doing your ICC on that. Budget £6k to do it properly in a couple of days in October.

Cheers
Jimmy
 
You need to make your mind up. I was responding to your question 'how would i know if one instructor is better than another?', which you asked in response to EME's point 'My advice would be choose your instructor not his/her boat.', which I completely agree with.

I think you need to decide what you want to achieve with this training - either you want a good general grounding in boat handling, nav, and local procedures. Or, you want to do all this and also get an idea about the sort of boat you're talking about buying.

In both cases you want to pick the right instructor. In the latter case, you need to charter something similar to the boats you've been referring to. I'm not certain that there's a sufficient parallel between say a Phantom 40 and a Squadron 58 to say that doing the course on a Phantom 40 is representative enough of larger flybridges to give you a good enough flavour.

At the risk of sounding a bit blunt, trying to save a couple of quid here and there on the ICC course doesn't really square with your plan of buying a 20m flybridge; if you are serious about this as your first boat, you should be chartering one, and doing your ICC on that. Budget £6k to do it properly in a couple of days in October.

Cheers
Jimmy

where did i say i want to save money? what i wanted to know was should i spend more to do the course on flybridge boat or not , i thought the question quite innocent but i seem to have upset you ? maybe my question was not clear enough, but i think 6k as you suggest to do an icc course a bit o.t.t. .

thanks
david
 
where did i say i want to save money? what i wanted to know was should i spend more to do the course on flybridge boat or not , i thought the question quite innocent but i seem to have upset you ? maybe my question was not clear enough, but i think 6k as you suggest to do an icc course a bit o.t.t. .

thanks
david

Tee-hee, not upset at all, maybe I misread your previous post:

What's the point icc is only 900 euros for the whole course including the boat hire, the other course charged 550 euro per day for boat hire plus the instructors fee , the icc is almost half the price and it's the icc license thats the required document in the med . I know that the day skipper is the more prestigious achievement but I can do that later when I have some skill and experience.

... which to my reading seems to be about the money.

I didn't say an ICC would cost £6k. What I was trying to say was, to get a flavour of the sort of boat you're talking about buying, you should budget £6k, charter one for a couple of days, and do the ICC at the same time.

Cheers
Jimmy
 
SquadronWe are (politely) suggesting you are confusing your needs & priorities.
Your question about which boat to choose for instruction ( knowing nothing of the instructors) is rather like asking the question " I want to learn to play golf -- I have 2 instructors. One plays Mizuno, the other Ping --- which should I go for?".

My own suggestion: -
1) Do a Day Skipper course -- its longer and you'll have a great holiday as well as learning
2) Choose your instructor ( if you ask for PMs you will get them). Ignore any thought that the boat colour is 'wrong'.
Instructors are worth their weight gold and earn every penny they are paid --- every penny spent will be some of the best value you will get in boating. Some are however better than others , or their style more akin to your own preferred learning stsyle. I think Jimmy underestimated at a budget of £6000 for the whole process (not just a course) ... most of us dont want to add up the true cost of our learning ( and some like me are still at it).
3) Buy your Boat
4) Do MORE instruction on your own boat -- endlessly reversing down fairways . moving off anchored lazy lines , going onto your and other berths. Practising anchoring etc
 
SquadronWe are (politely) suggesting you are confusing your needs & priorities.
Your question about which boat to choose for instruction ( knowing nothing of the instructors) is rather like asking the question " I want to learn to play golf -- I have 2 instructors. One plays Mizuno, the other Ping --- which should I go for?".

My own suggestion: -
1) Do a Day Skipper course -- its longer and you'll have a great holiday as well as learning
2) Choose your instructor ( if you ask for PMs you will get them). Ignore any thought that the boat colour is 'wrong'.
Instructors are worth their weight gold and earn every penny they are paid --- every penny spent will be some of the best value you will get in boating. Some are however better than others , or their style more akin to your own preferred learning stsyle. I think Jimmy underestimated at a budget of £6000 for the whole process (not just a course) ... most of us dont want to add up the true cost of our learning ( and some like me are still at it).
3) Buy your Boat
4) Do MORE instruction on your own boat -- endlessly reversing down fairways . moving off anchored lazy lines , going onto your and other berths. Practising anchoring etc

i do intend to spend more money on further training ,but at the moment i dont have time to do the dayskipper theory course in advance of the practical , the training in mallorca is just the first step. and i am actually paying for the charter of the boat on the more expensive course , might be worth asking for an upgrade as you suggest.

thanks
david
 
Day Skipper Theory

For what it's worth. I wouldnt bother doing DS Theory before doing the practical .

Several reasons, but mainly cos YM Theory is much much more comprehensive and the 'right' thing to do when the time is right whilst DS Theory is important but basic.

My observations :-
a)Looking at the RYA DS Theory book the night before and during the week will give you everything you need -- if you done any map or chart work in the past then you will 'get it' anyways
b) Have a crack at some of the online buoyage and 'lights' 'tests' -- you'll soon learn which is which
c) The instructor will take you through the basics anyways
 
Top