Will racing help a beginner sailor become a better sailor? Today, I spoke with a Boston sailor. I felt sorry for him. His boat is buried in snow and he was watching a blizzard dump more snow on it!! As a new sailor, he wanted to know if I thought racing would improve his sail trim knowledge and make him a better sailor? I asked him if he was a golfer -- another sport he won't be participating in anytime soon - and he indicated he was. I then asked him if he felt participating in a golf tournament when he first started to learn the game, would make him a better golfer?
The first thing we have to define is "better' as in "better than what". How do we become a better sailor/golfer? Some would say by practice but in my opinion unless a person starts with an accurate conception of what to do they will never become "better" with practice than the level they started at. They have no idea what they are practicing.
I'm a classic example. Early on, with little conception of sail trim and no lessons, I decided racing would be the answer. The wining boats wouldn't take me due to my lack of experience and, in hindsight, I would not have known what they were talking about anyway. I found a spot on a pick up crew boat but didn't learn anything because no one knew what they were doing -- including the skipper!!
Next, I did what I should have done in the first place - I took lessons but that wasn't the complete answer because the instructors didn't explain stuff in plain English. I was confused so I hired the best instructor from the school to teach me on my boat. That was the best money I ever spent because he presented the info in a logical, step by step manner that was easy for me to understand.
My Boston friend thought that maybe he'd try to learn sail trim by mastering each sail trim control one at a time. Unfortunately, sail trim is best learned by ingesting the information all at once, as if "it was coming out of a fire hose" because all the controls interact with each other. The first thing a new sailor should learn is what all the sail trim for the main and jib are actually adjusting. Then the sailor knows what's happening when he pushes or pulls a sail trim control.
There's no difference between racing trim and cruising trim (Dennis Conner). There's only a right way or a wrong way to trim sails. Once a sailor has a conception of why/what is happening to the sails then I think racing is a good idea because the trim happen more often than while cruising and, most importantly, is repetitive.
So, what do you guys think? Do you think a beginner should jump into racing first? What was your learning process?
I told our Boston friend I get back to him shortly with other ideas but, due to the blizzard conditions in his area, I don't think he's going anywhere soon!!!
The first thing we have to define is "better' as in "better than what". How do we become a better sailor/golfer? Some would say by practice but in my opinion unless a person starts with an accurate conception of what to do they will never become "better" with practice than the level they started at. They have no idea what they are practicing.
I'm a classic example. Early on, with little conception of sail trim and no lessons, I decided racing would be the answer. The wining boats wouldn't take me due to my lack of experience and, in hindsight, I would not have known what they were talking about anyway. I found a spot on a pick up crew boat but didn't learn anything because no one knew what they were doing -- including the skipper!!
Next, I did what I should have done in the first place - I took lessons but that wasn't the complete answer because the instructors didn't explain stuff in plain English. I was confused so I hired the best instructor from the school to teach me on my boat. That was the best money I ever spent because he presented the info in a logical, step by step manner that was easy for me to understand.
My Boston friend thought that maybe he'd try to learn sail trim by mastering each sail trim control one at a time. Unfortunately, sail trim is best learned by ingesting the information all at once, as if "it was coming out of a fire hose" because all the controls interact with each other. The first thing a new sailor should learn is what all the sail trim for the main and jib are actually adjusting. Then the sailor knows what's happening when he pushes or pulls a sail trim control.
There's no difference between racing trim and cruising trim (Dennis Conner). There's only a right way or a wrong way to trim sails. Once a sailor has a conception of why/what is happening to the sails then I think racing is a good idea because the trim happen more often than while cruising and, most importantly, is repetitive.
So, what do you guys think? Do you think a beginner should jump into racing first? What was your learning process?
I told our Boston friend I get back to him shortly with other ideas but, due to the blizzard conditions in his area, I don't think he's going anywhere soon!!!