alant
Well-Known Member
Re: Delivery Crews: What Next?
As a professional delivery skipper I agree. I am totally obsessed with weather windows. However, we can be under pressure from owners etc (last March, delivering north across Biscay, the onboard owner expressed a strong desire to meet 'v.heavy' weather-to test his new boat).
My priority is to get myself, my crew & the boat delivered safely home. I have no patience with heroics or the so called romance of heavy weather sailing & clubhouse yarns - there is no negotiation regarding safety when I am the skipper. (this may sound high handed, but I make no apologies - thankfully I haven't lost anyone yet)
Considering the remarks regarding the capabilities of a Jenneau in these conditions, read again the pre-xmas thread 'windward in 20 m/s (appr. F 8-9)' with some of the 'heroic' claims made there. Anyone who may have been out in a F9 + will shudder when remembering how bloody awful it was & how impossible it can be even in a heavy displacement boat.
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As a professional delivery skipper I agree. I am totally obsessed with weather windows. However, we can be under pressure from owners etc (last March, delivering north across Biscay, the onboard owner expressed a strong desire to meet 'v.heavy' weather-to test his new boat).
My priority is to get myself, my crew & the boat delivered safely home. I have no patience with heroics or the so called romance of heavy weather sailing & clubhouse yarns - there is no negotiation regarding safety when I am the skipper. (this may sound high handed, but I make no apologies - thankfully I haven't lost anyone yet)
Considering the remarks regarding the capabilities of a Jenneau in these conditions, read again the pre-xmas thread 'windward in 20 m/s (appr. F 8-9)' with some of the 'heroic' claims made there. Anyone who may have been out in a F9 + will shudder when remembering how bloody awful it was & how impossible it can be even in a heavy displacement boat.
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