RobF
Well-Known Member
Problem is, there are fair weather sailors who meet the passage and hours criteria but have never been out in truly testing conditions. The weekend I did my YM exam, it took place in the Solent with winds around F4-F5 so the examiner had no idea how I would cope with nasty conditions.
Same problem applies with amateur aviation. I failed a few "flat site" pilots having check flights at our hill site gliding club. Despite lots of hours experience some couldn't cope when wave rota was on the hill and not fit to fly solo.
I'm strongly agreeing with you on this point, but isn't this just a known weakness with any practical or theoretical exam?
Using your aviation example, I'm assuming aviation candidates need to be able to land their aircraft in a crosswind. I'm also assuming this this is hard to assess unless crosswind conditions are present on the day of their exams. Therefore, when examining a practical routine, the examiners have to consider the performance of a candidate doing a particular task and extrapolate from this their expected ability to perform similar tasks.
By way of personal example, for my YM I was assessed on my ability to berth on mooring buoys and marina berths. I wasn't assessed on pile moorings or drying moorings (e.g. against a wall). I assume my examiner thought my competence at buoys and marina berths meant it was likely that I was competent at other mooring tasks. On my YM theory exam, there was some kind of extrapolation of my knowledge on some ColRegs as I wasn't asked about every single reg. Interestingly I would have still passed the theory exam if I got a couple of the ColRegs questions wrong.
I'm not sure whether there is any way round having this kind of extrapolation for both practical and theoretical tests unless there were some kind of continual assessment regime for professional skippers so that they are assessed in a variety of conditions.
On a related note, I suspect that fair weather YMs are more likely to be of the 'slow track' variety. If you're fast-track, you go out whatever the weather to fit the miles into the allocated time. As a slow track YM, I generally don't go out if it's over F6 . After all, I sail for pleasure and don't really see much point in beating up myself and my boat by going out in adverse conditions. That said, I ought to caveat that I have been out in some pretty unpleasant conditions and your use of the word 'cope' is spot on.