How to run a happy ship
Yachting Monthly|January 2020
Toby Heppell gets advice on skippering with friends and family from Pete Goss, Dee Caffari and Conrad Humphreys
How to run a happy ship

Good leadership sounds like something required of the Navy, or a perhaps a committed race team and not something necessarily required for a day’s sail with friends and family. In reality, although we might not all think about our skippering skills in leadership terms, good leadership is often the difference between a skipper people like sailing with and a bad one, or an enjoyable day on the water with a happy crew or a long sail with arguments.

ACCEPT MISTAKES WILL HAPPEN

In a perfect world no one would ever make any mistakes and we could all go about our lives in a blissful and error free – if rather dull – utopia. Expecting an error-free sail is, in itself, a relatively large mistake. A good skipper should look to minimise the possibility of significant errors, but also be able to allow those they are sailing with to make mistakes and so learn and improve their own sailing skills.

‘In order for people to improve you do need to give them a level of responsibility,’ says Pete Goss, who has raced in the VendŽe Globe, sailed to Australia in an open lugger and is now cruising around the world with his wife Tracey. ‘A big part of that is allowing them to do things wrong. If you see someone making a mistake, your role as skipper is to judge the potential consequences of that mistake, and if you know they are likely to be fairly minimal, sit back and allow it to happen. Then you can gently coach them afterwards.

‘Shouting at someone, even through urgency not anger, when they don’t know what they are doing wrong or perhaps have not even had a chance to do something wrong, drastically reduces their confidence and only has the effect of making them less likely to give things a try in the long run.’

Esta historia es de la edición January 2020 de Yachting Monthly.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

Esta historia es de la edición January 2020 de Yachting Monthly.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE YACHTING MONTHLYVer todo
Midsummer on Hanö
Yachting Monthly UK

Midsummer on Hanö

This wonderful little island in the south-east of Sweden is a real gem off the beaten track

time-read
3 minutos  |
January 2025
ADVENTURE SAILING TO HAITI
Yachting Monthly UK

ADVENTURE SAILING TO HAITI

After spending two months in the Dominican Republic, Andy Brown sails west to Haïti bringing medical and school supplies to the town of Mole Saint Nicholas

time-read
8 minutos  |
January 2025
In celebration of bad sailing
Yachting Monthly UK

In celebration of bad sailing

New owner Monty Halls tests his sailing skills with his family aboard their Colvic 34 ketch, Sobek. A recently qualified Day Skipper, Monty faces a few unexpected challenges...

time-read
3 minutos  |
January 2025
Winter brings excitement and opportunity
Yachting Monthly UK

Winter brings excitement and opportunity

Oddity’s double glazing, insulation and heating create a warm, homely environment as I bash out this column.

time-read
3 minutos  |
January 2025
ADVENTURE MAISIE GOES TO GOES
Yachting Monthly UK

ADVENTURE MAISIE GOES TO GOES

To depart or not to depart? That is the question. Is it safer to stay, or suffer the wind and weather of a rough North Sea?

time-read
7 minutos  |
January 2025
'MAYDAY, GRANDAD OVERBOARD!'
Yachting Monthly UK

'MAYDAY, GRANDAD OVERBOARD!'

When David Richards and his grandson Henry went out racing from lowey, they didn't expect their sail to end with a lifeboat rescue

time-read
4 minutos  |
January 2025
VERTUE
Yachting Monthly UK

VERTUE

For a 25-footer, the Vertue has a huge reputation and has conquered every ocean. So what makes this little boat quite such an enduring success? Nic Compton finds out

time-read
10+ minutos  |
January 2025
Sailing siblings
Yachting Monthly UK

Sailing siblings

Mabel Stock, her brother Ralph, a friend Steve and an unnamed paying passenger passed through the Panama Canal in December 1919 on the sturdy Norwegian cutter Ogre. They were towed to a quiet anchorage in Balboa away from the boat traffic but within rowing distance of the shore.

time-read
5 minutos  |
January 2025
TECHNICAL MAINSAIL MODIFICATIONS
Yachting Monthly UK

TECHNICAL MAINSAIL MODIFICATIONS

Safety and performance improved hugely when Mike Reynolds reduced the size of his mainsail and re-configured the systems controlling it

time-read
8 minutos  |
January 2025
PILOTAGE DONE PROPERLY
Yachting Monthly UK

PILOTAGE DONE PROPERLY

Chartplotters are an amazing aid, but can detract from your real-world pilotage if not used with caution, says Justin Morton

time-read
10+ minutos  |
January 2025