dash300
Well-Known Member
Find a local sailing school and invest a couple of hundred quid in a day of one-to-one own-boat-tuition. We did that when we bought our first relatively large boat and it was the best money we've ever spent. Concentrate on close-quarters work - the rest will come pretty easily with practice, but being able to slip in and out of tight spots is the most painful thing to learn by trial and error. Elite Sailing at Chatham dod a great job for us - I know that they are quite a long way from Windsor, but I think they would probably find you a tutor for the day if you paid the travelling expenses.
Good advice. Have you heard the cacophony of bow thrusters in the locks these days, operated by skippers with anxious looks on their faces resorting franticly to the bow/stern thrusters. We all make mistakes and get crossed up occasionaly in a lock and take it on the chin, but the bow thruster brigade use the thusters as a matter of course rather than trying to understand how to use their prop/props to best effect. Or have I become a boating geek