penpal
Well-Known Member
Dear All
I would like to share my experience with the MBM Cruising Club last year. The purpose of this cruise was to build confidence in the sailors, instead a very bad decision by the one in charge broke confidence. This is an extract from an email I sent to a fellow Freeman owner.
Jimmy
I have a Freeman 32 Mk2, 1973, I keep it in Hythe, opposite Southampton. So I sail around the Solent. I try not do take her out in more than a Force 5, in the main I have taken on water in silly places, like the anchor chain locker and through windows, plus it is no fun. I have always had bilge pumps, but this year I invested in a pump for the forward bilge and another for the anchor locker.
Last year in July I went with the MBM cruising club to the West Country. Well, I started out to, the idea was that the 28 boats would meet up in the Hamble and set off for Weymouth. I telephoned them as the lock at Hythe Marina was closed due to an accident. There was a Force 7 blowing through so they said call the following day. Fine, we drove over in our car the following day to meet everyone, and they said it was still too rough but they would look to go the following morning so put your radio on at 6:00am
My instinct said, it was still too soon, the wind may have gone but the sea would be too rough. That morning the radio called calls started and the slow boats had to leave first to meet the fleet at 10:30 at the Needles. We set off, the journey to the Needles in the Solent was calm, misty, gloomy, but calm. We got to the Needles and all hell let loose. I radioed the lead boat, the MBM experts, and they said it would get better once we cleared the Needles. It didn't it got worse. all the boats had to slow to 4 or 7 knots, I found less than 7 knots and I did not have much control, I took masses of water on through the anchor locker, my wife was sick in her bed and my son just sat there in the water trying to mop up. It took 6 hours to get to Weymouth. We had only the GPS, you could not see the land or the harbour entrance. The following day the boaters refused to leave Weymouth. We needed to fit a pump and dry out. I had to hang on the entire journey and steer, then run round like a head less chicken to get towels in Weymouth to mop up and the next day to get parts. The next day was a beautiful sunny day, we said good bye and had a lovely sail back to Poole, then Lymington and just chilled out. Since then I am trying to build my confidence back up and have thought seriously about getting a new boat. The truth is the old girl handled herself very well. I am not so sure about me, I was was so upset and shaken over this I wanted to go home and leave the boat at Weymouth. I had been building up to this trip for years, both in trying to get Penpal up to scratch, new engines, new this that and the other. At the end of the day I should have turned around at the Needles and gone back, the experts were not that expert, they were more concerned with the schedule than our comfort. So one year later I am still trying to build up my confidence again. I think it will take replacing my boat for a newer one before I ever have that degree of confidence back again. I have a very pressured job and the boat has been a great release to me over the years, both in just taking my mond off work and the benefit of exercise.
It was interesting to see my wife's reaction at the thought of me walking away from the boat in Weymouth, "what about our plans to cruise the French canals" she was concerned that all our plans for the future would end there and then. It took her an entire day to convence me to drive the boat back to the Solent. The staff of the MBM who accompanied us were very good in coming aound and helping with the installation of the pump and getting us alongside the harbour, we met (briefly) some very nice people. It was all a geat dissapointment.
Oh well, that is life, at least I have my health!
I would like to share my experience with the MBM Cruising Club last year. The purpose of this cruise was to build confidence in the sailors, instead a very bad decision by the one in charge broke confidence. This is an extract from an email I sent to a fellow Freeman owner.
Jimmy
I have a Freeman 32 Mk2, 1973, I keep it in Hythe, opposite Southampton. So I sail around the Solent. I try not do take her out in more than a Force 5, in the main I have taken on water in silly places, like the anchor chain locker and through windows, plus it is no fun. I have always had bilge pumps, but this year I invested in a pump for the forward bilge and another for the anchor locker.
Last year in July I went with the MBM cruising club to the West Country. Well, I started out to, the idea was that the 28 boats would meet up in the Hamble and set off for Weymouth. I telephoned them as the lock at Hythe Marina was closed due to an accident. There was a Force 7 blowing through so they said call the following day. Fine, we drove over in our car the following day to meet everyone, and they said it was still too rough but they would look to go the following morning so put your radio on at 6:00am
My instinct said, it was still too soon, the wind may have gone but the sea would be too rough. That morning the radio called calls started and the slow boats had to leave first to meet the fleet at 10:30 at the Needles. We set off, the journey to the Needles in the Solent was calm, misty, gloomy, but calm. We got to the Needles and all hell let loose. I radioed the lead boat, the MBM experts, and they said it would get better once we cleared the Needles. It didn't it got worse. all the boats had to slow to 4 or 7 knots, I found less than 7 knots and I did not have much control, I took masses of water on through the anchor locker, my wife was sick in her bed and my son just sat there in the water trying to mop up. It took 6 hours to get to Weymouth. We had only the GPS, you could not see the land or the harbour entrance. The following day the boaters refused to leave Weymouth. We needed to fit a pump and dry out. I had to hang on the entire journey and steer, then run round like a head less chicken to get towels in Weymouth to mop up and the next day to get parts. The next day was a beautiful sunny day, we said good bye and had a lovely sail back to Poole, then Lymington and just chilled out. Since then I am trying to build my confidence back up and have thought seriously about getting a new boat. The truth is the old girl handled herself very well. I am not so sure about me, I was was so upset and shaken over this I wanted to go home and leave the boat at Weymouth. I had been building up to this trip for years, both in trying to get Penpal up to scratch, new engines, new this that and the other. At the end of the day I should have turned around at the Needles and gone back, the experts were not that expert, they were more concerned with the schedule than our comfort. So one year later I am still trying to build up my confidence again. I think it will take replacing my boat for a newer one before I ever have that degree of confidence back again. I have a very pressured job and the boat has been a great release to me over the years, both in just taking my mond off work and the benefit of exercise.
It was interesting to see my wife's reaction at the thought of me walking away from the boat in Weymouth, "what about our plans to cruise the French canals" she was concerned that all our plans for the future would end there and then. It took her an entire day to convence me to drive the boat back to the Solent. The staff of the MBM who accompanied us were very good in coming aound and helping with the installation of the pump and getting us alongside the harbour, we met (briefly) some very nice people. It was all a geat dissapointment.
Oh well, that is life, at least I have my health!