Fastnet 2013 (?) |
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pjamescowie ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 26 May 12 Location: London, England Online Status: Offline Posts: 3 |
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Not quite a beginner's question I guess, but here goes.... (couldn't think where else to post it!)
Getting back into sailing - and specifically yachting - after a long break. Love cruising but also looking for more of a challenge: racing! Thinking very seriously of joining a Fastnet campaign in 2013. Loads on the internet. Trouble is, with campaigns charging £3000+ to get involved, which one should I choose? (I'm doing the Round the Island Race with Stormforce). From past experience, can anyone on the forum recommend an English sailing school to do Fastnet with, or perhaps suggest an alternative way in?
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Quagers ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Oct 06 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 279 |
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Dont do it with someone that charges that much, find a regular amateur crew of guys who need some extra people. What follows turned into a bit of a longer post than I expected when I started but is based on my experience of going from having never yacht raced 4 years ago to doing Fastnet last year and being signed up to this years Bay of Biscay Race.
Offshore boats tend to fall into 3 categories, 1) Pay to Play - Run by a school or company, anyone who pays there money gets taken for a ride, they have to make a profit and will take anyone so quality of sailors isnt always great. However if you are set on taking this route I would recommend Sailing Logic. 2) Shared Contribution - Normally the owner will provide the boat and the whole crew will split either part or all of the costs of food, mooring, race entry etc. No one is making a profit here and they dont have company overheads so this will be much cheaper. 3) Rich owners - Finally there are boats where the owners pick up the whole tab and are just looking for the best sailors they can get on board. These boats are a bit rarer than category 2 ones but tend to be very good boats to sail on and your costs ill only extend to a round at the bar (great for students). The way to find the 2nd 2 types of boats are through online crew lists I've found RORC's is the best: JOG is ok, although they havee more advertisements on their facebook page: and finally Royal Southern is great for round the cans stuff, I recommend putting your details up in crew available section and contacting those who want crew then just wait, ways to improve your chances are: 1) Be available at short notice - boats often have people drop out in the week before an event, if you can be free to fill these slots you will get loads of one off rides. This gives you a varied experience in lots of boats and a chance to prove yourself. One of these one offs can often turn into a permanent spot. 2) Improve your skill set - get out dinghy sailing, which makes you a better helm/trimmer, learn t do bow etc etc, all rounders are key in offshore crews when you'll be sailing in a watch system with often just 4 on deck. More skills and positions make you more attractive. 3) Don't expect to be on a winning hot rod boat straight off, it takes time to build experience and contacts which will lead to better and better rides, be patient. 4) Go to the bar post racing - Chat to other crews, make friends, this will often lead to rides. 5) Don't abandon a crew you've made a commitment to for a better ride - Obviously you want to be moving onto better boats but you've gotta do it in the right way, dont ditch someone you have said you will sail for at the last minute. Its the fastest way to burn bridges. All of this assumes your starting from a base of having no contacts, if this isnt the case, use them. Who you know is a huge factor in finding places on boats. This year is the year to be doing this as most boats try to organise their crew for fastnet in the preceding season. This year is the year to be doing this as most boats try to organise their crew for fastnet in the preceding season. Finally this may all sound like a lot of effort, but its all worth it for this moment: Edited by Quagers - 30 May 12 at 9:10am |
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Mister Nick ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 01 Aug 09 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 389 |
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I'd just find a group of guys who need crew to be honest. I wouldn't bother paying a company to take you because you'll probably end up with a bunch of people who can't sail very well and it'll just be a totally different atmosphere. You probably won't learn much/anything from it and plus, if the guys on the boat turn out to be morons you've got to spend the whole race with them. It'll be cheaper this way too.
What Quagers said about improving your skill set is definitely a good idea. What I'd do personally is get really, really good at doing bow (because bowmen are always in demand, not many people want to/are good enough to do it) and then get good at driving competently too - Bowman and driver are two positions that are absolutely essential. Any monkey can pull a headsail in, but there aren't many people who can do a kite peel at 3 in the morning without stuffing up or be trusted to drive the owners pride and joy without supervision. Just get as much experience as possible on as many boats as possible, it'll make you a more attractive option to people. Volunteer for the crappy jobs on the boat that no one wants to do. Once you've found the boat you want to try and do it on, be the guy that goes down below afterwards and helps the mid bow pack the kites up before having a beer, put yourself up for delivery trips (if required), offer to help out with maintainance etc. on weekends you're not racing. You just want to get into the owners good books! ;) Edited by Mister Nick - 30 May 12 at 9:21am |
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pjamescowie ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 26 May 12 Location: London, England Online Status: Offline Posts: 3 |
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Hi Quagers,
Thanks for taking the time to provide such lengthy and detailed advice - very much appreciated. (Great inspirational photo of Fastnet Rock as well!) I've got my name out on a few 'available crew' lists already and will now seek some additional listings following your advice. You recommended Sailing Logic if I were to go down the sailing school avenue for Fastnet - Any particular reason why that might be? I've looked at their offering in some detail, and it seems pretty comprehensive, but was wondering (as you mentioned them) if you had any additional insight... Thanks again!
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pjamescowie ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 26 May 12 Location: London, England Online Status: Offline Posts: 3 |
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Mister Nick, thanks also for your advice... Particularly that regarding racing positions and skill sets.
Completely with you re "going the extra mile" - as an independent school teacher for the last 8 years, that's the story of my life! I think you're right to be wary of company offerings for the Fastnet: it is a lot of dosh and, yes, one could end up sailing with a pack of morons and not learning much. I've had a chat with the bloke who runs Stormforce Coaching as regards their Fastnet package... Like Sailing Logic, they seem pretty serious about their competitiveness on the day, so I'm going to continue negotiations and see what emerges. I'm doing Round the Island with them in a month, so that might provide some extra insights. Thanks again for your help!
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Presuming Ed ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 26 Feb 05 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 641 |
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What might be worth considering is doing some inshore - winter/spring series stuff with a school. Especially if you don't have much big boat experience. There should be some training on big boat stuff - dip pole gybes, peels (maybe) etc. And there's Stuart Quarrie's book the offshore race crews manual. Bit old, but AFAIAA, it's the only thing out there. Doesn't deal with assyms, though, so nothing about kiwis etc.
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Quagers ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 24 Oct 06 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 279 |
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I recommend sailing logic because quite simply they are the school who from my experience seem the most interested in scoring decent results, not just getting their clients round the course. As well as their own boats (the Reflex 38's) they sub contract to competitive private boats and their owners for specific races when they have the demand. This means their skippers tend to be racers and the boats are up to race spec not just safety spec. Have a look through last seasons RORC results and in the owner section look for sailing logic, they do well. Recent examples are Visit Malta Puma last season and Scarlet Logic in this years Caribbean 600. They are expensive though, so as someone else suggested maybe try doing some inshore racing with them to build skills and then use this to get a place on a private boat for Fastnet.
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Heritagerockpig ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 22 Aug 12 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1 |
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I've done the Fastnet a couple of times, and would suggest that a quick look at the results will tell you which schools/commercial ventures are worth going with - some will compete for prizes, others will have the experience as the goal. It depends upon what you want - 4 days sitting on the rail of a speed machine may suit some, others want to be part of a team, or to take a particular role and I think that is as important as anything else. I'd have a really good look at the boat, the skipper and the crew before taking a chance on any boat before crossing the Irish Sea, and the RORC series lets you do just that.
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