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I'd definitely advocate dinghies as a good starting point. The saily bit of yachting is a relatively minor consideration and you will do better if you can do that side of things subconsciously.
Thanks Tranona and KellysEye.
I have my eye on a dinghy that ends early hours of Sunday morning on fleabay not too far from me. I am very excited as its something that I have just wanted to do from a young age and now have the opportunity tooI live close to Mudeford and work in Poole so there are vast amounts of coastal waters close to me so get myself into.
Thanks Tranona, I am going to give them a call in the morning and see what they have to say.
I disagree with william & duncan
Me too
Not sure how needing to learn to balance a boat can be given a negative conotation with regards to sailing.��
In dinghies things happen quickly and cost tens or hundreds if they go wrong. In keel boats, things happen much more slowly but cost (tens of ) thousands when they go wrong. Train for fast reactions with cheap repairs.
Short tacking a dinghy up tide in the shallows is a skill that can't be over rated. When your "iron tops'l" fails (or as with me the shaft drops out of the coupling) being able to tack back onto a mooring in a crowded anchorage is something that will not phase you...