Captain as crew
This is a real interesting question, and some of the responses are interesting also.The simplist answer to the survey question for me is "sometimes, depends". If the Captain is experienced, safe, thoughtful, then I have no problem being crew. I have to relate it to my flying days. There are some people that I will fly with and sit in the back seat, there are others I will fly with and sit in the right seat, but with an agreement about who is in charge and in what situations that might change, and there are others that I'm pilot in command or we don't go, regardless of who is flying the aircraft at that moment. I feel the same about sailing, and the question should be answered prior to leaving the dock.I noticed that some on here seem to equate "having the helm" with being in charge. I can appreciate that lay people would have some identification with that concept, but frankly, and my opinion only, if that is what you think, you are not ready to Captain my boat. I might sail with you, but we would have an agreement about who is in charge if it turns to crap (I'm sitting in the right seat, but not the back).I also do not want to start that old "my boat, my rules" debate. Frankly, I don't buy that one either. I've had the opportunity to sail with some pretty good sailors. Many with more offshore miles than I'll ever see. Even on my boat, they would or have been in charge. And the beautiful thing about that is that there is much to learn from those experiences.Being Captain is not about having the helm. In fact you can be sleeping and still be performing appropriate duties as Captain if you are making sure that you are receiving adequate rest to make good decisions and you have instructed your crew as to your expectations for operation of the boat and under what conditions you should be awakened. It goes without saying that you know the crew is capable.I guess the most valuable lessons I have learned as crew, or in a few sailing classes as acting Captain, is that being Captain isn't about driving the boat. The more valuable lessons have been about making the right decisions early, being in the right place on the boat to properly provide command guidance, and making sure that I have done everything possible so that no one gets hurt.Being a good Captain is also about providing knowledge to the crew. Letting them helm is a great way to get their participation, but it sends the wrong message if they think they are in charge. Part of the knowledge you can provide is ultimately teaching them how to Captain perhaps. The only analogy I can find with an automobile is teaching your child to drive...do you consider them to be "Captain" when they first get behind the wheel? I suspect not...you may not have much control, but I bet you have agreed that stop means stop before you left the curb.So yes...I like to crew and learn much by doing so. But, I can't crew with just anyone.Dan Jonas (S/V Feije II)