Saturday 3 August 2013

All That You Need To Know To Plan An Enjoyable Sailing Holiday

Everyone looks forward to a vacation so that they can break away from the monotonous and tiring daily grind.

However, the idea of vacation differs from person to person. While some are happy to go visit their loved ones, others take time out to travel to new and exotic places.

Many others love to go on trips full of excitement and adventure that gives them an adrenalin rush. A sailing holiday provides just the exhilaration that such people look for. Sailing sounds a very thrilling thing to do, but if it is undertaken without proper planning, it can turn out to be quite a disastrous trip. There are so many factors to be considered and a lot of decisions to be taken to make sure that your sailing vacation is the adventure you had imagined it to be.

The major things to be considered include: Picking up the correct destination Choose the right destination, keeping in mind the weather conditions there, the age and health of the people in your travel party, and your budget. Deciding on the boat and the crew Pick the right type of boat/yacht and see to it that is well-maintained and in perfect running condition. The crew that would be operating it should be knowledgeable, trained, experienced and friendly. It would be a good idea to check out a reliable online local business directory to find about the sailing companies whose services you can hire. The required amenities Your sailing holiday doesn't have to be uncomfortable.

You should ensure that your boat has all the basic amenities for comfortable living such as microwave oven, coffee maker, blender and TV. You should also put in some water toys and arrange rented paddle boats, kayaks, scuba diving gear, etc. The necessary food provisions You should have enough food and beverages to feed all the travelers well for the duration of the trip. Carry sufficient water for daily drinking and cooking needs.

First aid necessities Make sure that the boat has a first aid kit containing antiseptics, antibiotics, medicines for healing cuts or bruises and treating allergic reactions, etc. Clothes to be packed You must pack light and pack right, including essentials like good shoes, swimsuits, tees and shorts, hats, sunscreen, etc.

Having a sailing itinerary It is advisable to plan about the places or islands you intend to visit and draw up an itinerary. Learn a little about the destinations and read up about their high points. Getting the right phone Save yourself from unreasonably high telecom bills by enquiring about the roaming charges levied by your phone company before you venture out to the sea. You can get good coverage at excellent rates if you buy a pre-paid phone/data card of the local service provider.

If you plan right, your sailing holiday will be much more than just a vacation. It will be an unforgettable adventure, an experience you will cherish for life.

http://ezinearticles.com/?All-That-You-Need-To-Know-To-Plan-An-Enjoyable-Sailing-Holiday&id=7863740

Wednesday 24 July 2013

23 Reasons Why Putting an Engine in a Sailboat is the Worst Sailing Innovation Ever




Why do people want an engine on a sailboat? I mean, isn't the whole point about owning asailboat that you use it for sailing? For actually making the boat go from point A to point B using the natural power of the wind? Isn't that why it's called "sail-ing", not "engine-ing"?

So my nomination for Worst Sailing Innovation Ever is the engine. Or more specifically the crazy idea of putting an engine in a sailing boat. I don't care if it's an inboard engine or an outboard motor. It's just plain wrong.Here are 23 reasons why putting an engine in a sailing boat is the worst sailing innovation ever....
  1. You don't need an engine. Lin and Larry Pardey have sailed all over the world, in and out of all sorts of exotic stopovers, for gazillions of miles, on two boats they built themselves... both boats without engines.
  1. An engine costs money to buy and install in the boat.
  1. It costs money for spare parts.
  1. It costs money for repairs.
  1. It costs money for fuel.

  1. An engine takes up space you could use for other things.
  1. An engine adds weight to the boat.
  1. The propeller increases drag.
  1. Maintaining an engine takes time away from sailing.
  1. Repairing an engine takes time away from sailing.

  1. An engine breaks down.
  1. An engine is noisy.
  1. It is dirty.
  1. It vibrates.
  1. It is smelly.
  1. It pollutes the air.
  1. If you spill the fuel it pollutes the water.
  1. If you have an engine you need several extra holes in your hull for the cooling pipes, exhaust, prop shaft etc.
  1. An engine does not provide extra safety. Murphy's Law says that it will fail just when you most need it. If you don't have an engine you will be more prudent about getting yourself into bad situations and you will develop the skills to get yourself out of difficulty using natural methods.
  1. Without an engine you will feel closer to nature.
  1. Without an engine you will have to learn to sail well.
  1. Without an engine you will have the joy of entering the same anchorages in the same way that Columbus, Drake, Cook, Nelson - and the Pardeys - did... under sail alone.
  1. You don't need an engine. Adam Turinas sailed most of last season without one after his outboard failed. He says he is "better for it".

Wednesday 17 July 2013

HMB Endeavour stripped bare


On 3 June HMB Endeavour headed to dry-dock for scheduled maintenance, and now as we have reached the halfway point in her docking, all is proceeding well. For the last week or so, a team of contractors have been removing the antifouling paint from the ship’s bottom and after nearly 20 years, we are back to bare timber.
HMB Endeavour replica (front) and James Craig (background) in the Captain Cook Graving Dock at Garden Island, Sydney.
HMB Endeavour replica (front) and James Craig (background) in the Captain Cook Graving Dock at Garden Island, Sydney.
A bi-product of the stripping has been dust and grit and the poor old ship looks a little under the weather. Over the next four or five days the topsides will be sanded and oiled and the underwater areas will be primed and repainted.
Wood of Endeavour's hull and propeller
Endeavour stripped bare.
While in the appropriately named Captain Cook Dock, the opportunity has also been taken to repair some of the timber normally below the water line. In the main these repairs have been minor but a necessary part of remaining sea worthy.
Photo of
HMB Endeavour replica (front) and James Craig (background) in the Captain Cook Graving Dock at Garden Island, Sydney. Photo: Navy Imagery Unit
An unusual feature of the docking this year was the fact that Endeavour docked down withJames Craig. To the best of anyone’s knowledge, there have never been two sailing ships simultaneously in the Captain Cook Dock.
The ship is on track to undock on 19 June and after a few trials underway, we should be back in the museum early that afternoon.
John Dikkenberg
Captain, HMB Endeavour replica

Saturday 6 July 2013

A CRUISE FEEDS THE SOUL



A CRUISE FEEDS THE SOUL
By Kevin Walters

The docklines are once again tied and my feet plod once more on solid ground.  My body is back in port, but I don’t know if my sailor’s soul will ever make it back to the dock. 

Perfectly peaceful anchorage in Baie Fine, Ontario
Before we left, I did my research.  I read all I could and talked to everyone who would share their experiences about the pros and cons of taking an extended cruise on a small sailboat. Now that we’ve returned, I realize most weren’t honest about the most difficult part of cruising: coming home.  As my family (wife and two young daughters, then ages 5 and 8) and I returned to our home port and stepped ashore, I realized that – after more than 1,000 nautical miles and nearly 70 days spent living and cruising aboard our 28-foot sailboat – I am closer to drowning on shore than I ever was while at sea.  On land it’s not water, but rather the pace and particulars of being a landlubber, that’s stealing the breath of life.

Last summer (2010) I lived a cruising fantasy.  I snatched a dream from my sleep and made it reality.  I now have something to write about, something to recall fondly, and something to build upon.  How can I be drowning?

Cruising gave me a clear goal; I knew where I was headed and how to get there.  I have goals when I’m on land, but I don’t always know how to achieve them.  I also have skills on land, but they pale in comparison to my ability to move watercraft from one place to the next.  I’m not a great breadwinner, perhaps, but I’m the best cruiser, navigator, sailor, and captain I can be.

Bridal Veil Falls near Kagawong, Ontario
As we plied the waters of the Great Lakes and headed to the isolation of the islands in Lake Huron's North Channel, I was alive with freedom. “Sail far and live free!” became our slogan.  I was on fire with ambition.  I was full of the life a cruising sailor longs for in the deep of winter.  It’s not easy to describe how 28 feet of fiberglass suddenly contained all I ever hoped for; my family, my charts, my gear, and my passions were all on board.

Little and Big Point Sable flashed by.  Lonely freighters broke up the horizon. Our voices echoed in the crescent-shaped bay of South Manitou Island.  The passage to Beaver Island was cold and wet.  Grey's Reef amazed us with turquoise water, massive boulders, and abandoned mid-lake lighthouses.  TheMackinac Bridge soared overhead, and the island gave us sights to see as we biked around her shoreline.  We found peace at sunset in Les Chenneaux Islands.  Monarch caterpillars became our pets on Harbor Island.  A storm blew through in Pilot Cove.  We provisioned in Gore Bay.

Family campfire in Pilot Cove, Drummond Island
The anchor held tight during a stormy night onSouth Benjamin Island.  We tied stern-to-shore onHeywood Island. Fish and chips filled our tummies from the old bus inKillarney.  We climbed high in Covered Portage Cove.  We watched a bald eagle soar inBaie Fine.  We welcomed July in Little Current.  Sturgeon Cove’s entrance challenged our piloting skills.  We shared a campfire and new-found friendship on LouisaIsland…blueberries galore on Croker Island…more friends, campfires, and cozy anchorages in the Benjamin Islands.  Freshly caught walleye fillet encrusted with Frosted Flakes cereal was on our dinner menu in Beardrop Harbor.  We enjoyed the same beautiful views as did the megayachts in Harbor Springs. Six-foot waves helped us surf home from PentwaterMichigan.  I pinched myself each morning when I woke, making sure I wasn’t stuck in a January dream.

After years of daydreaming about an extended cruise, I fooled myself into believing I’d feel fulfilled when I returned to the dock.  I thought the itch would have been scratched and the hunger inside would have been fed.  I was wrong.  I am now full of memories but somehow empty.  It took months of planning and preparation for a small old boat to carry a family of four over a thousand miles of Great Lakes water in the period of about three months.  My life on land was focused during months of pre-cruise preparation.  My life at sea for three months was intense and full of passion, challenges, beauty, and closeness to my family.  I won’t forget the quiet reflection during my solo-sailing days at the beginning of the journey, or the sight of my daughters sleeping snugly in their berths below as my wife and I battled through waves and rain in the early hours of morning, or our first night anchored at a deserted island.

I was completely fulfilled while cruising in the wilderness of the North Channelwith few amenities, yet I find life can be lacking back here on land.  The great irony is that on land I’m surrounded by high-definition televisions, cell phones, high-speed Internet, cars, DVD players inside of cars, restaurants, shopping malls, and every other “luxury” of the 21st century ashore in America.  If I learned anything from cruising, it’s that material things cannot fill the soul but memories and experiences can make it overflow.

My wife wonders how I can be in such a funk after having lived another of my dreams.  I wonder how I let prudence guide me back to our home port when reckless abandon and my sense of adventure could easily have had the bow headed for the Erie Canal and ultimately the Intracoastal Waterway.  From there, the whole world is just over the horizon.  As I sit at home writing, planning next year’s sailing adventure is what will make the weather a bit warmer and the winter sky brighter until that spring day when our bow once again points away from our life here on land.

Monday 27 May 2013

Sailing on a boat with big waves

7 Things to Expect During Your Sailing Lessons

Sailing is an activity that is not popular among the masses. It is only for the rich, and they can't afford to buy a new boat, or just plainly have no time to do it, these are myths of sailing that until now hover over people who want to or might just actually take an interest in sailing. Sailing is not just any kind of sport or activity, it is a love, a passion and for some an obsession. Now that you are on your way to taking the first step to discovering what it is about sailing that aficionados love, here are some things to expect during your first couple of sailing lessons. 1. You will be taught and introduced to the basic skills of sailing involving safety, seamanship and boat handling. Rigging is taught as a process of setting up your boat and necessary equipment before launching into open waters. 2. Water safety training. This is not your ordinary safety learning for common watersports such as wakeboarding and surfing. Sailing water safety training covers swimming, first aid, cold-water survival skills, and basic capsize skills. Activities and drills include treading, putting a life jacket in the water, swimming from under the sail of a capsized boat, and artificial respiration. 3. Dinghies are light boats that respond quickly to wind, waves and crew balance. They can easily tip over and capsize, but they also can easily be righted and drained. Since these vessels are more sensitive than bigger yachts, they are the ideal classroom for sailing lessons, and provide a solid ground for sailing basics. 4. Expect a range of weather conditions. You will be out in open waters, and wind gusts added to the sun's heat can only be some of the various weather conditions you will face during your sailing lessons. Layered clothing is advised and a pair of closed light shoes that will not leave marks on the boat's deck. 5. The principles if sailing are simple, but it's the mastery that defines a weekender to true sailing enthusiasts. So, do not expect to have perfect skills in your first few sailing lessons. Sailing is an art and it takes time and a lot of practice to perfect it. 6. Mal de Mer. Motion sickness is the most common spoiler of a perfect sailing day. If you are prone to it, expect that you may encounter this feeling during your sailing lessons and it is best to execute preventive measure. Motion sickness medications are convenient, on top of adequate rest and hydration before each class. 7. Expect a spectacular view of crystal clear waters, and great panoramic landscapes. Discover your passion for this well loved activity that has transcended generations and is part of any family's heritage. What to expect during your sailing lessons can only go so far as what you hear about it, you need to experience it. Make your own sailing story and go beyond expectations.

Tuesday 14 May 2013

Dragon Boating Can Be A Strong Team Building Experience

Dragon boat racing is an ancient sport that is thought to have originated in China in about 500 B.C. It was originally used in festivals and was thought to bring luck when celebrating the planting of the summer rice crop. Dragon boating gets its name from the particular shape of the boat. The boat itself is a long craft, shaped somewhat like a canoe that holds 22 people. The head and rear of the boat are carved to mimic a dragon's head and tail, and the body of the boat is painted in reds, gold and other colors to mimic the dragon's coloration or scales. The crew of the boat consists of twenty rowers or paddlers, one drummer, and one steersman. The paddlers sit in the mid section of the boat, facing toward the front of the boat, and each have one large paddle. The drummer sits at the front of the boat, facing the paddlers, and pounds out a rhythm for the paddlers to row to. This role is considered to not only be beneficial to the paddlers, but also important when observing the ceremony of this traditional sport. Sometimes, instead of a drum, a gong will be used to sound out the rhythm of the paddling. The steersman stands at the back of the boat, facing the front, and uses a long paddle to steer the boat. The paddle acts as a rudder would in a larger boat. Although the sport of dragon boat racing originated in China, it is now practiced all over the world. Some areas still consider a ceremonial event to be held during festivals or important times of the year, while other areas simply see it as an exciting competitive sport. Because the paddlers, drummer and steersman must work in concert in order to win a race, or even propel themselves very far, the sport can be a real team building experience. Getting to know the other people on the team can mean a better rhythm, as each person uses their strengths and encourages their team, which can lead to a better time or more wins for the team. There are two kinds of dragon boat races held in modern times. These are called sport races and festival races. Festival races are usually about 500 meters long, but because they are informal, the distance and rules of the event can vary from place to place. Sport races have stricter rules and are held at distances of 200, 250, 500, 1000 and 2000 meters. The International Dragon Boat Federation presides over these competitive races. Longer races, up to 100 kilometers or more, are also held in some parts of the world. Dragon boat racing is a great way to get outdoors, get a bit of exercise, and meet people. The electric excitement of the sport is captivating and invigorating. Dragon Boating is a great team building activity, it is both physically exhausting and rewarding. GWN Dragon Boat 577 Wellington Street West Toronto, ON M5V 1G3‎ (416) 962-8899 provides corporate Dragon Boating events as well as official Dragon Boating fesitval. For more information be sure to click here.http://ezinearticles.com/?Dragon-Boating-Can-Be-A-Strong-Team-Building-Experience&id=7259894