matt1
Well-Known Member
I've been sailing for about 30 yrs (mainly based from the same mooring on the river Hamble) and this year I suddenly noticed how fast everyone seems to motor everywhere these days! Now, years ago when yachts had auxilliary engines they used to plod down the river, it was just the power boats that went fast. Not so now, witness the Moody 40+ hurtling down the river in some great hurry and all the countless other ones following behind kicking up wash (many of these big raggies are worse than the powerboats!)
I guess many of us suffer from being in corporate life and it seems to be spilling over into sailing! Fresh from leaving work, we rush to leave the mooring and get out sailing. The copious pilot books and magazine articles tempt us to extend our cruising such that we find ourselves having to put the motor on to make the tidal gate, or get there whilst there is still room at the anchorage.
What a shame, do we all need to take chill pills? Wouldn't it be great to start a cruise from the outset saying "no engine!" -I wonder how far I would get on a busy and windless solent weekend? How would my kids take the news that we weren't going to get to the sweet shop on the island before it shuts!
I guess many of us suffer from being in corporate life and it seems to be spilling over into sailing! Fresh from leaving work, we rush to leave the mooring and get out sailing. The copious pilot books and magazine articles tempt us to extend our cruising such that we find ourselves having to put the motor on to make the tidal gate, or get there whilst there is still room at the anchorage.
What a shame, do we all need to take chill pills? Wouldn't it be great to start a cruise from the outset saying "no engine!" -I wonder how far I would get on a busy and windless solent weekend? How would my kids take the news that we weren't going to get to the sweet shop on the island before it shuts!