Yachtmaster
Offshore
This special preparation
course is designed for those who wish to take the RYA / MCA
Yachtmaster Offshore examination. The course gives potential
Yachtmasters the opportunity to thoroughly revise both
practical and theoretical subjects. You will spend five days
onboard the yacht with one of our fully qualified
professional RYA Yachtmaster instructors prior to taking the
RYA / MCA Yachtmaster Offshore examination.
Sailing will be in local
waters as it is normally found that at this level boat
handling in close quarters is required rather than long
Channel crossings. The instructor will tailor the course to
your needs but our experience usually leads us to emphasize
the following subjects: Passage Planning, Skippering
Techniques, Man-overboard Recovery, Meteorology, Close
Quarters Handling and Pilotage in Restricted Visibility.
You are strongly advised to
arrive for the course already having a thorough knowledge of
the Collision Regulations, particularly in relation to
lights, shapes and signals. The successful Yachtmaster
Offshore candidate is an experienced yachtsman who has a
theoretical knowledge to the level of the RYA
Yachtmaster shore based course and will be able to
skipper a cruising yacht on passages up to 150 miles from
port. The RYA/MCA Yachtmaster Offshore Certificate of
Competency is acknowledged throughout the World as the top
sailing qualification.
Syllabus
Candidates may be given the opportunity to demonstrate
knowledge of competence in the areas listed below. In each
section the examiner will expect to see the candidate take
full responsibility for the management of the yacht and
crew. In Yachtmaster Offshore exams the candidate will be
expected to demonstrate competence based on broad experience.
- 1. International Regulations for Preventing
Collisions at Sea
Questions will be confined to the International
Regulations and although candidates must be aware of the
existence of Local Regulations, they will not be
expected to memorise specific local regulations.
- General rules (1-3)
- Steering and sailing rules (4-19)
- Lights and shapes (20-31)
- Sound and light signals (32-37)
- Signals for vessels fishing in close proximity (Annex
II)
- Distress signals (Annex IV)
- 2. Safety
Candidates will be expected to know what safety
equipment should be carried on board a yacht, based
either on the recommendations in the RYA Boat Safety
Handbook (C8), the ISAF Special Regulations or the Codes
of Practice for the safety of Small Commercial Vessels.
In particular, candidates must know the responsibilities
of a skipper in relation:
- Safety harnesses
- Lifejackets
- Distress flares
- Fire prevention and fighting
- Liferafts
- Knowledge of rescue procedures
- Helicopter rescue
- 3. Boat Handling
Candidates for Coastal Skipper examinations will be
expected to answer questions or demonstrate ability in
simple situations only. Candidates for Yachtmaster
Offshore will be expected to answer questions or
demonstrate ability in more complex situations and will
also be expected to show a higher level of expertise:
- Coming to and weighing anchor under power or sail in
various conditions of wind and tide
- All berthing and unberthing situations in various
conditions of wind and tide
- Recovery of man overboard
- Towing under open sea conditions and in confined areas
- Boat handling in confined areas under sail
- Boat handling in heavy weather
- Helmsmanship and sail trim to sail to best advantage
- Use of warps for securing in an alongside berth and
for shifting berth or winding
- 4. General Seamanship, including maintenance
- Properties, use and care of synthetic fibre ropes
- Knots
- General deck-work at sea and in harbour
- Engine operations and routine checks
- Improvisation of jury rigs following gear failure
- 5. Responsibilities of skipper
- Can skipper a yacht and manage the crew
- Communication with crew
- Delegation of responsibility and watch-keeping
organisation
- Preparing yacht for sea and for adverse weather
- Tactics for heavy weather and restricted visibility
- Emergency and distress situations
- Victualling for a cruise and feeding at sea
- Customs procedures
- Standards of behaviour and courtesy
- Charts, navigational publications and sources of
navigational information
- Chartwork including position fixing and shaping course
to allow for tidal stream and leeway
- Tide and tidal stream calculations
- Buoyage and visual aids to navigation
- Instruments including compasses, logs, echo sounders,
radio navaids and chartwork instruments
- Passage planning and navigational tactics
- Pilotage techniques
- Navigational records
- Limits of navigational accuracy and margins if safety
- Lee shore dangers
- Use of electronic navigation aids for passage planning
and passage navigation
- Use of waypoints and electronic routeing
- Definition of terms
- Sources of weather forecasts
- Weather systems and local weather effects
- Interpretation of weather forecasts, barometric trends
and visible phenomena
- Ability to make passage planning decisions based on
forecast information
- Candidates for Yachtmaster Offshore and Coastal
Skipper must hold the Restricted (VHF only) Certificate
of Competence in radiotelephony or a higher grade of
certificate in radio telephony.
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