Sailing

Believe me, my young friend,
there is nothing - absolutely nothing -
half so much worth doing
as simply messing about in boats.
--rat (The Wind in the Willows)

When I was about seven, my dad built a boat - a mirror from a kit and started teaching us to sail - the beach was less than a mile away. I've enjoyed sailing ever since.

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Port Philip Bay

I grew up in Melbourne Australia which is on Port Philip Bay; a very large but generally quite shallow body of water.

With little by way of hills to protect it from wind, a front could whip up a serious chop in a matter of minutes. The timid would head for shore as soon as a front appeared on the horrizon.

The entrace is both narrow and shallow, resulting in a strong tide gate called the rip.

I recall a bottle drift dive at the rip, a dozen of us holding onto a rope side by side being carried by the current over the bottom at considerable speed, looking for old bottles from the many ship wreaks.

San Francisco Bay

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San Francisco Bay is a great place to go sailing, one can generally rely on good wind (20 knots) in the afternoon no matter how calm the morning is.

Here too, a very narrow entrace (The Golden Gate) results in a strong tide gate (6 knots) and with prevaling westerly winds the ebb tide can result in a vicious sea state outside the gate.

I moved to Silicon Valley in 2000 and for several years was too busy to even think of sailing - especially since neither I nor anyone I knew had a boat.

In 2009 a friend pointed me at Club Nautique (CN) who run a yacht charter business and a sailing school (US Sailing). They have bases in Alameda and Sausalito (sadly both a good hour drive from the south bay).

To charter boats you generally need some certification - of which I had none. CN had a Bare Boat Cruising class comming up which seemed to match what I knew, so I called to sign up.

There were a couple of pre-requisite classes needed first but they offered to let me do a checkout sail with one of their instructors and if he was satisfied, I could just take the tests for the pre-requisite classes - which is what I did.

The Bare Boat class was a lot of fun - four days of sailing, crew overboard drills (lots of them), anchoring etc on the bay. At the end (after passing another test of course) I could charter any of the yachts in CN's fleet.

Grand plans of chartering in the BVI's etc ran into the reality of school age kids, soccer, ballet you name it. I did manage to take Sam sailing on a friend's boat in 2012.

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Fast forward to 2018 and with both girls off at college (or graduated) it was time to go sailing again. I finally joined CN and signed up for their Passage Making program - which covers all the US Sailing classes I'd not yet taken, and let's you take their boats out of the bay. I did Bare Boat again - and again it was a lot of fun.

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The club's mailing list is a great way to hookup with others looking for someone to go saling with, and splitting the charter cost with 5-6 makes it far less painful ;-)

In 2018 I got to go out twice during fleet week and watched the Blue Angels from the water - a very good view, have done the same several times since. There were hundreds of boats just drifting with the current around the exclusion zone (so a crashing plane doesn't take out any boats ;-)


US Sailing at Club Nautique

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Author:sjg@crufty.net /* imagine something very witty here */