bitbaltic
Well-Known Member
I think you are wrong.
There have been several people questioning the amount of training the crew get. There have been allegations made that four weeks is inadequate. I suspect these people are speaking without experience. They are entitled to their opinion but one needs to weigh up how much credibility to give it.
I completely disagree. (Of course more training would always be better but there’s a pay off in training time vs output.)
I have sailed (and raced) large boats across oceans with some of the crew as complete novices. By large boats I mean 55’ and 67’ and with hank on sails. I’ve also been in the Southern Ocean although not sailed there.
It is certainly possible to manage the risk effectively although the way you run the boat may not be as effective in racing terms as a round the can racer or professional ocean race team.
Some of the comments questioning the training given were (in my humble opinion and with any respect due) completely gratuitous and inappropriate and would feed into bereaved families and friends grasping at things to blame.
The point being that somebody else with sufficient experience to have a valid opinion disagrees with you. Apart from saying that you disagree with them and rehearsing your own experience, you haven’t addressed that.
In fact it could be argued that the end result of your view- that Clipper’s training is sufficient for crossing oceans- means that anybody with sailing experience equivalent to Clipper’s training ought to feel able to comment on crossing oceans. That enfranchises most or all of the commentators on this thread!
You have set a very different level for being fit to cross oceans and being fit to comment on crossing oceans. And I think you are wrong.
Tough world.