sailorman
Well-Known Member
Yet again, WHERE IS THE OP,
you lot all wound-up like a spring n all
you lot all wound-up like a spring n all
Yet again, WHERE IS THE OP,
you lot all wound-up like a spring n all![]()
There are only usually five or six people on a school boat at a time. Good schools try to vary the level of skills and courses being followed so that Coastal Skipper or Yachtmaster students have Day Skipper and Competent Crew students as crew to give them a better feel of what it's like to manage crew.
Contact the RYA; I'm sure they will assist in resolving the matter and certainly wouldn't want any of their members to be engaged in such underhand activity.
While i can see the logic of mixing Comp Crew and Dayskipper or even Comp Crew with Coastal skipper mixing any of theses three levels of course with a YM prep is basically a rip off.
Understand that it's not the only way to run courses, but to describe it as a rip off is disengenous in my experience.
WTF?...
No one wins. Not even the PS that sold the fish as PC feels SC and doesn't boomerang.
WTF?![]()
Well since it was Friday I thought I would put in code.
No one wins. Not even the PS (Practical School) that sold the fish (places) as PC (paying client) feels SC (short changed) and doesn't boomerang (return)
I would recommend Yorkshire In Yer Face.Article in the Telegraph yesterday saying Cockney Rhyming Slang was on its way out, so there's room for a new dialect.
As a YMI of many years experience with an excellent track record on Yachtmaster candidate passes, it has never even occured to me that a problem of having a mixed bag of skill levels onboard could be a problem. Every course is run to the full strength of the crew onboard and the different skill/experience levels used as a catalyst. To say anything else about the Yachmaster candidate losing out because of a mixed crew is a complete nonsense. My track record proves otherwise.
One could argue that part of the Yachtmaster Practical is how (in)competent crew are managed ;-)