Dockhead
Well-Known Member
My ICC has expired, and rather than go through renewing it, I think about doing a more meaningful qualification -- Yachtmaster Offshore. If any qualifications can be said to be really meaningful.
I sail long distances and typically many different countries every year -- 10 last year. I've never been asked for a qualification since Croatia a decade ago, but with more and new countries, you never know. Plus it can be reassuring to my insurance company, passengers, etc.
So what's the most efficient way to do it? Obviously I don't want to divert too much time away from boat repairs, for this.
None of the items in the syllabus (http://www.hamble.co.uk/rya-training-courses/yachtmaster-offshore-exam-syllabus/) is anything I have not studied fairly deeply over my 30-odd years at sea. I would get a text from one of the training courses and go through it thoroughly to be sure there isn't some item of "book learning" I've managed to miss.
Maybe it makes sense to hire an RYA examiner for an afternoon for a review, prior to taking the exam itself?
Tips and advice appreciated as always!
I sail long distances and typically many different countries every year -- 10 last year. I've never been asked for a qualification since Croatia a decade ago, but with more and new countries, you never know. Plus it can be reassuring to my insurance company, passengers, etc.
So what's the most efficient way to do it? Obviously I don't want to divert too much time away from boat repairs, for this.
None of the items in the syllabus (http://www.hamble.co.uk/rya-training-courses/yachtmaster-offshore-exam-syllabus/) is anything I have not studied fairly deeply over my 30-odd years at sea. I would get a text from one of the training courses and go through it thoroughly to be sure there isn't some item of "book learning" I've managed to miss.
Maybe it makes sense to hire an RYA examiner for an afternoon for a review, prior to taking the exam itself?
Tips and advice appreciated as always!