dom
Well-Known Member
I didn't have any problems ' managing ' the crew of the GibSea 42 I took my YM exam on...
Well yes, but then you did just walk off an aircraft carrier
I didn't have any problems ' managing ' the crew of the GibSea 42 I took my YM exam on...
Call me madcap but might the time to consider a certificate of competence for people sailing small boats be in the period between announcement and implementation of legislation requiring a certificate of competence for people sailing small boats?
There is a logic in that as a boat less than 7m LWL would not get Cat A and in many cases not even B. The qualification is for Offshore, so not unreasonable that qualifying miles and exam should be achieved in a boat considered suitable for that use.
The RYA possibly has its reasons for seeking to exclude boats under 10m. from assessment duties, and those under 7m. LWL from 'qualifying mileage', but those reasons might well be due to lobbying by sea school principals - i.e. money - and the conspicuous shortage of relevant sea experience among RYA senior staff.
There is a wealth of talent exercised by these owner/skippers in small but eminently seaworthy boats. For the RYA to continue to pretend that they, and their skippers, are somehow unworthy of acknowledgement takes me right back to my original 'OP' question.
Then again he was a lovely bloke, had taken part in every Fastnet possible and was linked to the Marines - his lovely wooden boat - named something like ' Sarai Maria ', a South African army song ? was at the disposal of the Marines, and last I heard is now with them full time.
This examiner chap had been on the WWII HMS Exeter, I think at the Battle Of The River Plate !
Suggestion: allow smaller boat accreditation, but only in selected yachting centres where a suitable youngster can be found to clamber around on top of the boat the boat (basically any racing sailor) as opposed to wising to brace himself in the cockpit somewhere? Just a suggestion and happy to be shot down![]()
Im sorry that you still dont get this. Possibly an International Certificate of Competence, but what you claim is simply impossible.
Anyway the minimum criteria for qualifying mileage is 7m LWL so the boats you mention comply.
Could you explain what checks are done to establish that an examiner who submits a report on a candidate has actually carried out the exam as claimed? I think your case would be strengthened if you could demonstrate the impossibility.
Perhaps the RYA should visit some of the more remote (cheaper) areas where there are plenty of old small boats around.
The reality is that the number of people undertaking offshore passages in boats less than 7m LWL is tiny - and the number who want to use such passages for the purposes of gaining a qualification even tinier.
Are you suggesting that a 21' boat which can be manhandled around and easily single handed is the right craft to gain experience for a test (i.e. YM Offshore) which is partly about crew management and manoeuvring boats which displace 10s of tonnes or are you saying that there should be a separate exam for demonstrating high proficiency in sailing small boats?
At the moment examination is not, I think, tied to centres, and tying it would bind the scheme even more firmly to the financial interests of sailing school owners. However, I can't see an issue in having a subset of examiners happy to test in smaller boats. Neither would I have any objection to restricting YachtmasterTMOffshore to bigger boats if YachtmasterTM Coastal was available to smaller ones as well..
It just seems a shame to exclude anybody with a boat under 30' long from using their expereince towards the qualifcations.
Could you explain what checks are done to establish that an examiner who submits a report on a candidate has actually carried out the exam as claimed? I think your case would be strengthened if you could demonstrate the impossibility.
I had a French pilot's licence at one time. There are very strict requirements for classroom study, air time and examinations. I met none of them - well, I met the air time one, but not in France.
His claim is that an instructor gave out a 'YM ticket' with no test. Instructors do not give out YM certificates, the RYA department tasked with overseeing the YM exams do. His claim is therefore impossible'
capnsensible,
my experience with yacht sailing schools is very limited; do they always get in an independent examiner then or do some have a suitable bod in-house ?
Surely, examiners are the bastion of honesty, we even have a forumite bishop in waitng on here who is an exalted examiner. I'm certain he like the rest, wouldn't fiddle.
As I understand it from examiners I know, they will not examine people they know for those exact reasons, Similarly, they dont re examine candidates they have failed previously. John Morris will have more insight on this having been one for twenty years.
The RYA continuously looks for holes and plugs them. DS and CS course completion certificates have your picture on them, number registered etc.
Its most certainly not Mickey Mouse.
The length requirement for the exam seems to have been imposed because someone wanted to take it in a Heard 24 (which is within the rules as laid down still on the RYA website) but the RYA couldn't find a local examiner who knew about gaffers so they invented a rule to exclude the boat.
Well said, that man.
Could you explain what checks are done to establish that an examiner who submits a report on a candidate has actually carried out the exam as claimed? I think your case would be strengthened if you could demonstrate the impossibility.
I had a French pilot's licence at one time. There are very strict requirements for classroom study, air time and examinations. I met none of them - well, I met the air time one, but not in France.