Sailfree
Active member
It was an X boat from my club Parkstone that had the incident.
We race a Wayfarer at Parkstone and used to have many races that went out into the bay.
On one occassion prior to this incident we were near the back of the fleet in a F3 but the tide had changed and we were going backwards at the entrance - in that situation manoeuvering does become a bit more difficult!!
At the time of this incident the Ferry should have given way and the skipper was a very experience sailor in her 70's that was not gung ho.
Since that incident there have been a number of changes.
1. The Ferry now has priority.
2. Days for racing in the Bay are very carefully chosen wrt tides and wind strength.
3. One or Two of our club powerful rib rescue boats are stationed by the chain ferry to assist anyone caught by the tide.
4. With larger Ferrys using Poole it is an instant disqualification for anyone passing between the race rib (IIRC flying a Q flag) and any ferry.
Like most incidents everyone learnt from this event and changes made to try and ensure it was never repeated. Regrettfully we now only have 3 or 4 races out into the bay each season with this much more cautious approach.
Still one of the best clubs to race at and one of the nicest areas to sail IMHO.
Interesting incident though for some armchair sailors to pontificate about and reveal their ignorance.
PS Robin is probably one of the most experienced sailors wrt transiting the Poole entrance so his comments are worth serious consideration.
We race a Wayfarer at Parkstone and used to have many races that went out into the bay.
On one occassion prior to this incident we were near the back of the fleet in a F3 but the tide had changed and we were going backwards at the entrance - in that situation manoeuvering does become a bit more difficult!!
At the time of this incident the Ferry should have given way and the skipper was a very experience sailor in her 70's that was not gung ho.
Since that incident there have been a number of changes.
1. The Ferry now has priority.
2. Days for racing in the Bay are very carefully chosen wrt tides and wind strength.
3. One or Two of our club powerful rib rescue boats are stationed by the chain ferry to assist anyone caught by the tide.
4. With larger Ferrys using Poole it is an instant disqualification for anyone passing between the race rib (IIRC flying a Q flag) and any ferry.
Like most incidents everyone learnt from this event and changes made to try and ensure it was never repeated. Regrettfully we now only have 3 or 4 races out into the bay each season with this much more cautious approach.
Still one of the best clubs to race at and one of the nicest areas to sail IMHO.
Interesting incident though for some armchair sailors to pontificate about and reveal their ignorance.
PS Robin is probably one of the most experienced sailors wrt transiting the Poole entrance so his comments are worth serious consideration.
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