We Believe You Deserve a Dream Sailing Experience and its our GOAL to Deliver YOUR DREAM . We are passionate about providing You with the BEST VALUE yacht rental services for Your peace of mind and to make Your Experience the very Best. Our Trustpilot Rating is 4.9/ 5 👍
Tuesday, 17 January 2012
An Aegean adventure: Catch the sailing bug in beautiful Bodrum
Flying into Bodrum on Turkey's Mediterranean coast, we seemed almost to be skimming the barren mountain tops as the plane descended. My wife and I were looking forward to a week of relaxation, as our holiday package had promised oodles of supervised activity for our 12-year-old twins.
The Sea Garden, it transpired, was a new addition to our tour operator's list of properties offering family activity holidays, and they were keen to establish its reputation for water sports in particular.
The popularity of Turkey with British holidaymakers has grown steadily over the past decade. Three years ago, the country overtook Spain as our most popular destination, as the strength of the euro sent many of us in search of cost-saving alternatives.
'OK. So let's see you all try it now,' said sailing instructor Charlie, as we sat in a bar jutting into the turquoise Aegean. Sadly, he wasn't talking about downing one of the free cocktails the bar specialised in.
It had become clear that we were all being encouraged to take part in the programme of water sports on offer. Already we were being taught the correct arm signals to use to attract the attention of Charlie and his expert sailing colleagues, should any of us be unfortunate enough to fall out of a boat during our stay. Hang on a minute, I hadn't even agreed to get into one!
three-hour course on basic sailing skills was recommended for those who, like me, hadn't clambered aboard a dinghy for donkey's years. So, before long, I was being made to capsize a small, single-sailed boat called a Pico, while our instructor, Sam, shouted directions from the shore on how to right it. An exhausting but invaluable lesson, as it later turned out.
Doug, a fellow holidaymaker who had signed up for the same course, lost his hat in the water, exposing two stitches he'd required after his windsurfer capsized the day before. He was beginning to wonder whether a small boat was the easier option he had hoped it might be.
The children – Eleanor and Daniel – were off at their Kids' Club, which offered lots to do and qualified instructors to do it with. They'd already taken a shine to Sabrina, who looked after the ten to 13-year-olds and took them for games in the pool, cricket and kayaking. Other instructors taught windsurfing and sailing in small boats called Bugs. The day after my course I surprised myself by heading off, straight after breakfast, to see if I could do some more sailing – and was amazed to find they were happy to let me take out a boat on my own.
Old man and the sea: Malcolm before his mishap
I struggled at first to remember which hand to use on the tiller and which leg to keep straight, but I soon began to get the hang of it. Until, that is, I was forced to turn or end up on the rocks ... and suddenly forgot everything I'd learned the day before. I must have pulled on the tiller instead of pushed, whereupon the boom whacked me on the head, the sail flapped in the breeze and the next thing I knew I was in the Aegean.
But, even though Ahmet, the lifeguard, was there in a flash in his speedy inflatable, I managed to stand on the daggerboard and right the boat. And once again I headed across the bay beneath a sail full of wind, at what felt like a tremendous pace, feeling quite proud of myself as I sat out over the edge of the boat to balance it.
'Did you see me out there?' I asked the family after I'd handed the boat back to its rightful owners. 'Yes, Dad,' said the children with what, I felt, was a little too much hilarity. 'You had a builder's bum!' said my daughter, as they collapsed into fits of laughter. Keeping my swimming shorts up had been the least of my worries.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-2087472/Holidays-Turkey-Catch-sailing-bug-beautiful-Bodrum.html#ixzz1ji1P5MdV
Teenage champions sail away with major regional award
Brothers Mat and Ben Lulham-Robinson from Yeadon Sailing Club have been presented with a major regional award.
Mat and Ben Lulham-Robinson have been named the RYA Yorkshire and Humber region young sailors of the year, an award which recognises the outstanding achievements of young sailors across the country.
Matt, 14, and Ben, 13, from Burley-in-Wharfedale, were recognised for their results in the Mirror dinghy class. They were junior European champions in 2010 and junior World champions in 2011 and they even made their own sails on their bedroom floor.
“We are so proud to receive this RYA trophy particularly as it is such a well recognised and respected award,” said Ben afterwards
“We’re excited about being selected for the RYA 420 transition training squad.”
“Winning this award has made us even more determined to continue to work hard to achieve some great results in our new boat in 2012,” said Matt.
“It is a big step up from the junior (under-16) Mirror class to the youth (under-19) 420 boat, but we are looking forward to the challenge. We have been training and competing over the Christmas and new year holiday and the latest suit of sails, which we helped to make, are even faster than our previous ones.”
Monday, 16 January 2012
Forward-thinking veteran
Bob Preston is amused by the suggestion that had fate followed a slightly different course, he might now possess an Olympic yachting gold medal.
Actually, he admits he was never really that close, despite his former tornado skipper Rex Sellers eventually winning gold with Chris Timms at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Sellers would also win silver in the same class four years later in Seoul.
The fact is, Preston recalls with some humour that Sellers had sacked him as his crewman about five years before Los Angeles. They'd sailed together at the 1972 world cherub championships, finishing second, and moved up to the tornado class before a personality clash eventually ended their relationship.
Preston's not the least bit concerned about the failed partnership. The seasoned 61-year-old Nelson sailor has since followed an entirely different path and just 10 days ago in New Plymouth, he won his sixth national paper tiger championship title.
He'd won his first way back in 1979 – the same year as his split with Sellers – ahead of further successes in 2004, 2005, 2009 and 2010, with this year's title completing a handy half dozen.
Preston freely admits that he could do without the competitive intensity and financial pressures associated with Olympic campaigns.
"You needed that extra level of killer instinct which I never had or wanted really," he says.
"I think I just realised that I didn't have that extra bit [and] you've got to be good at raising that extra finance and that just wasn't me, which I accepted."
He's now clearly found his niche on the New Zealand yachting scene and the one-man multi-hull paper tiger provides the perfect fit.
He's been sailing tigers since 1974, having followed the customary procession of P class, cherub, laser, 470 and moth classes since first hitting the water as a 12-year-old. The tiger's now his domain and there's little he doesn't know about the boat.
"Skippering a trailer sailer or skippering another boat is all right, but the laser, which is a class that everyone relates to, is a very physical boat, and I'm not that sort of yachtie really.
"I'm a touchy-feely type – and I like the tuning side of the paper tiger because you've got quite a lot of choice with sails and foils, so it's a combination of things.
"It's just like a car really; you've got the steerage, and some people's steering is better than others. It's knowing what you're looking for, which is the feel of the whole boat and knowing how to go about getting that feeling.
Ad Feedback "The ideal yacht is one that you don't have to change many settings because it's tuned for overall conditions, whereas some people do fiddle a bit, but I don't. Too many people fiddle; it's a mental thing; and I'm not a fiddler."
Nor is Preston interested in the mind games that some of the other sailors indulge in.
"I don't get psyched out and there's a lot of psyching going on. I don't do it to other people, but other people do it to each other and try to do it to me but give up after knowing me for a wee while.
"Just before the race I do settle into a different mode than what I would normally be sailing in. I've always been able to switch on just before the start gun goes – it's just a concentration level that's really intense. You've just got to stay there."
Six titles clearly place him among New Zealand's all-time elite in his class, although several of his successes haven't come without incident.
He almost knocked himself out during his 2009 championship-winning campaign in Nelson. He'd already sewn up the title ahead of the seventh and final race of the series in Tasman Bay, and despite not needing to sail, opted for one last dash on the water. However, it turned into the most eventful race of the week for Preston when trouble struck on just his second approach to the bottom mark.
"I was heading toward the bottom mark and a couple of boats got a little bit out of control and sort of forced me to take evasive action," he recalls. "I gybed; the boom hit me on the head and I capsized and ended up with a bit of a dizzy head."
He eventually regained his composure and continued but eventually decided that enough was enough and, with the series already in the bag, withdrew from the race.
This year's successful campaign also produced some anxiety after Preston was forced to compete with a patched-up mainsail. He'd torn the sail on a marker pile in Nelson Harbour during his buildup, requiring local sailmaker John Leydon to complete some urgent repairs. It meant Preston entering the five-day regatta with the sail untested. "I didn't know if it was going to hold together or what, but it didn't seem to affect me too much. That sort of thing can play with people's heads a bit, but I've learnt not to let that sort of thing come into it.
"The first time I used [the repaired sail] was the first race. I didn't have a chance to try it out because when we got up there it was pissing down with rain."
He also had to fight off the effects of flu during the first three races, with illness actually forcing him out of the first race sailed in heavy 25 knot winds.
As his health improved, however, so did his competitiveness.
If his extensive sailing experience has taught him anything, it's ensuring he's always competitive at the start line.
"The starts are so important and over the years you develop your own style of sailing and your own style of starting and you get to know the people around you, you know, who to be near and who not to be near.
"Starting is one of my strengths. If you get a bad start and you end up in the 20s or 30s, you can catch up, but it's very hard to get past the top eight or nine. There's lots of boats going at very similar speed, so you can catch up to them. But it's very hard getting right to the top.
"Most of the time you'll find the guy who gets the clear air start – there's usually four or five guys who will get good clear air and you'll all meet at the top mark together and it's all on from there.
"The idea of not making any mistakes is high in priority and I seem to be able to pick what is a mistake and what's not."
Preston likes to use the analogy of a snooker player thinking "five or six shots ahead" in his approach to sailing. He tries to stay mentally ahead of the competition.
"I can see [what's developing] in five seconds time and I know where I want to be in five seconds time, whereas with a lot of other people, that five seconds time is now. In another five seconds they're where they shouldn't have been."
Squash provides another useful analogy, specifically a player's ability to control the T and dominate an opponent – something Preston's also familiar with in a yachting context.
"You can sail against someone who's a little bit better than you and wonder how the hell he does it, but you can still do that same thing to other people. So I relate to that squash scenario quite a bit and I quite often think about that, about who's going to try and dominate me and how do I counteract that."
Preston's consistency on the national scene is also remarkable in the sense that Nelson doesn't have a competitive paper tiger fleet.
Dave Shaw, who won last year's national title in Wellington, is the only tiger sailor in Nelson, and the pair interact freely and frequently when it comes to preparing their boats and training for regattas. Preston certainly isn't concerned about the absence of a local fleet, with six training sessions usually enough to get him ready for a national championship event.
"I just cruise and go windsurfing when it's blowing and have a bit of an idea how many times I'd like to sail my tiger before the contest. It doesn't bother me, no, but it would bother other people.
"It's just part of the overall plan that I've followed. But it's quite good to set a goal each year, which is the nationals and then peak at that time."
Increasing age doesn't faze him either. Despite the obvious stress on legs, back and arms, Preston's learned to adapt.
"Everyone when you get to this age, you've got your joint problems and neck problems and if you push it too hard you can actually do more damage, so I sort of know how far to go.
"It's knowing how to relax and that concentration thing, being able to switch off and switch back on again.
"That's the good thing about the tiger, it's not too physical.
"It's like most things, you get out of it what you put into it."
Friday, 13 January 2012
Proposals for £8.3m sailing academy go on show
PLANS for an £8.3m sailing academy will go on show giving people the opportunity to give their opinions.
The academy, in Pwllheli, designed to showcase the town to the world, is expected to provide a major shot in the arm for the area’s economy to the tune of around £1m a year.
Ellis-Williams Architects in partnership with local architects Dobson:Owen have been working on initial designs, which are now open for all to see.
This marks the start of a consultation process, with the designers on hand to explain how their preliminary design for the development will work and to receive feedback.
Councillor John Wynn Jones, who leads on the economy for Gwynedd Council, said: “Good progress is being made on the sailing academy project with building work set to get underway in 2012 and the project completed by the end of 2013.
“The architects appointed by the council have come up with an exciting initial design for the development, and we hope that as many local people as possible come along to the consultation day to let us know what they think.
“This event is the first phase of this process of contacting, consulting, and listening to the community.”
Gwynedd Council leader Cllr Dyfed Edwards added: “Without a doubt, Pwllheli is one of the top sailing venues in the British Isles which already hosts a number of high-profile national and international sailing events and regattas.
“This flagship development will enable Pwllheli to attract bigger and more frequent races and competitions to the area.
“Along with the economic boost, the development will also provide local people, and children especially, the opportunity to take part in water sports. This in turn will lead to more of our young people developing careers in the local outdoor activities sector.”
The information event will be held at Pwllheli Sailing Club on Tuesday, January 17 from 12pm-8pm.
The exhibition will remain on display at the sailing club for the remainder of the week, and will be on show at Neuadd Dwyfor in the town during the week commencing January 23.
Teenage Dutch sailor, 16, approaches end of solo voyage in stages around the world
AMSTERDAM — Teenage Dutch sailor Laura Dekker is nearing the finish of her solo sailing trip around the world almost the same way she began it — in good spirits, despite endless debate about the terms under which she is allowed to be at sea.
Now 16, Dekker is on the final leg, a long stint from Cape Town, South Africa, to the Caribbean island of St. Maarten, where she set sail in 2010. Amid blustery weather, she’s on pace to reach port in Philipsburg around Jan. 24, her lawyer Peter de Lange said in a telephone interview Wednesday.
But in her native Netherlands, the story of her voyage has once again been overshadowed by conflicts with the Dutch school system and bureaucrats about approval for her trip.
De Lange confirmed a report in De Volkskrant newspaper Tuesday that truancy officers issued her father a summons to appear late last year after a newspaper quoted her as saying she hadn’t been giving her studies full attention.
De Lange said the report was a misunderstanding, based on her saying she needed to concentrate on sailing while weather in the Atlantic was poor.
When her father refused to turn up, the truancy agency notified child protective services, infuriating the family.
“Who knows, maybe they’ll be waiting for her with handcuffs at the finish line,” De Lange said.
He added that the incident now appears to have blown over. But Dekker told a Belgian radio station by satellite phone on Friday that while the voyage had been a “dream come true,” she is considering moving to New Zealand when her trip is finished.
Dekker has citizenship there because she was born on a boat off the New Zealand coast.
De Lange said tensions may evaporate once the trip is over, given that Dekker is two years older than when she first announced her plans, and she wants to return to school anyway.
A Dutch court originally blocked her voyage and only permitted her to set off after she bought a bigger, sturdier boat than the one she originally planned to use; fitted it with advanced navigation and radar equipment; enrolled in a special correspondence school; and took courses in first aid and coping with sleep deprivation.
There are no questions of world firsts or records attached to Dekker’s trip. Guinness World Records and the World Sailing Speed Record Council have decided they will no longer recognize records for “youngest” sailors to avoid encouraging dangerous attempts.
Unlike other young sailors to circumnavigate the globe in recent years, Dekker stopped at ports along the way to rest, repair her 38-foot (11.5 meter) ketch Guppy, and catch up on her studies before resuming her trip.
Her circumnavigation attempt started two months after Abby Sunderland, a 16-year-old American, had to be rescued in a remote section of the Indian Ocean during an attempt to circle the globe. Jessica Watson of Australia completed a 210-day solo voyage at age 16. Dekker is now on day 508 of her voyage.
“After another heavy squall with winds at 40 knots and rain streaming down, it slowly became a calmer night and a wonderful day,” Dekker said in her most recent journal entry, published on her website Tuesday.
Thursday, 12 January 2012
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)