Tim Good
Well-Known Member
Planning to begin a circumnavigation this year over the course of a few years. Assuming I can tick the box for membership (1000nm single voyage), is it worth joining in all seriousness?
Planning to begin a circumnavigation this year over the course of a few years. Assuming I can tick the box for membership (1000nm single voyage), is it worth joining in all seriousness?
I don't know ... this is one of those "how long is a piece of string?" questions. It really depends upon what you want out of it, and what you're prepared to put in.Assuming I can tick the box for membership (1000nm single voyage), is it worth joining in all seriousness?
You at unlikely to see and OCC flag in Europe because the qualifying passage is 1,000nms usually the Atlantic.
They're not allowed to come back?![]()
You're correct that - unlike the CA and Trans Ocean that accept subscriptions from all comers - the OCC limits membership to people who have done a "qualifying passage". But that requirement is not onerous or very restrictive: 1,000 NM is not really much of a passage, if you're active in ocean sailing.I've not seen many flying fishes around so far (UK to Algarve via Normandy), but many CA and Trans-Ocean burgees.... You at unlikely to see and OCC flag in Europe because the qualifying passage is 1,000nms ...
While it's true that associate members don't fly the regular burgee, they have one of their own:We had associate membership to make it easier to join the OCC when qualified, an associate is not allowed to fly the flag. You have to report the passage to get full membership.

Here in (an extremely windy!) Bequia (for example) there a number of OCC flagged boats and there were & are several in Martinique, Dominica, Antigua etc and elsewhere in the Caribbean. Usually one gets to know fellow members in every anchorage, but that is what the OCC encourages & (amongst other things) : sharing information, organizing social events, tracking others progress and helping out in any way possible. It is a very sociable, friendly club with Port Officers throughout the world. The use of SSB and partipation in nets, especially the OCC Caribbean net, is especially helpful in achieving the kind of objectives mentioned.
The club has members from Canada, USA, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, UK, Australia etc -etc - it is truly international but with a UK office.
And as an OCC member I declare an interest and bias! Membership has brought us great enjoyment and added to our cruising pleasure.
A prospective member has to decide for themselves whether it is for them.
+1 :encouragement:
Flying my OCC burgee has always been a great source of pride - and a great source of unexpected impromptu sundowners in a tropical anchorage somewhere!
I keep flying my ybw burgee in vain as well, having said that, if I spot a new boat coming in to la linea I go straight across abd introduce myself with a nice business card we have had made!>I've not seen many flying fishes around so far (UK to Algarve via Normandy), but many CA and Trans-Ocean burgees. Never seen anyone else with a YBW burgee either, to great shame ;-)
You at unlikely to see and OCC flag in Europe because the qualifying passage is 1,000nms usually the Atlantic.