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Sail training

From its modern interpretations to its antecedents when maritime nations would send young naval officer candidates to sea (e.g., see Outward Bound), sail training provides an unconventional and effective way of building many useful skills on and off the water.

Built in 1914 as Grossherzog Friedrich August, a school training ship for the German merchant marine, the since 1921 Norwegian-owned Statsraad Lehmkuhl, is one of the oldest sail training ships in service

Background edit

By 1900 most commercial sailing vessels were struggling to turn a profit in the face of competition from more modern steam ships which had become efficient enough to steam shorter great circle routes between ports instead of the longer trade wind routes used by sailing ships.

Ships were built larger to carry bulk cargoes more efficiently, their rigs were simplified to reduce manning costs and speed was no longer a premium. Owners shipped cargoes that were non-perishable so that their dates of arrival (which steam ships had started to guarantee) were of less importance. Finally as the Panama Canal was opened, sailing ships were used in parts of the world where steam ships still found it hard to operate, principally on:

Both Chilean and Australian ports were difficult to supply with coal for steamships to refuel. Also, both routes to Europe went round Cape Horn. The end of the First World War saw a brief return to profitability as all ship types were in scarce supply due to wartime losses but that boom became bust as many new steam ships were built to replace the sailing ships that were lost.

Genesis in the 1930s edit

 
Italian navy training ship Amerigo Vespucci, launched in 1931.

While many countries of the world operated sailing ships as training vessels for officers in their Merchant Marine in the 1920s and 30s, several sailing ship owners such as Carl Laeisz and Gustaf Erikson determined that there was still a profit to be made from the last of the sailing ships.

Erikson purchased existing ships that required the minimum of capital investment and repaired them with parts cannibalised from other ships. Identifying the bulk cargo routes that would still offer paying freights, he manned the ships with a smattering of paid experienced officers.

Some of the deckhands were apprentices from steamship lines and other adventurous youth who had paid a premium to sail while being trained, some recruited for very modest salaries. The apprentices were considered trainees and were the first formalization of sail trainers with crew drawn from members of the public who just went for the adventure, as opposed to a career.

With manning costs netted out on Erikson's balance sheet, the ships continued to return a paper profit. However Erikson was under no illusions as to the long term profitability of his venture, which depended on ignoring the depreciation on his ships and a shrinking supply of sound hulls and rigs. The company would use their profits to diversify into steam after World War II. While the shipping companies of Erickson and F. Laeisz gradually turned to steam, the next generation of captains were climbing up the hawsehole and taking command of their own vessels, redefining sail training as a purely educational endeavour with trainees as the cargo.

From 1932 through 1958, Irving Johnson and his wife Electa "Exy" Johnson circumnavigated the world 7 times with amateur youth crews on board their vessels named Yankee. Over the years, their voyages were featured in books they authored, and in National Geographic magazines and TV specials like "Irving Johnson, High Seas Adventurer". Their archives are at Mystic Seaport, Connecticut.

Australian Alan Villiers purchased the old school ship George Stage from Denmark in 1934. Renaming her the Joseph Conrad, he sailed her round the world with no paying cargo and a crew of youth who had paid to be there. He also took as many non-paying youth as he could afford to fit in the budget, those he considered at risk on the streets of their inner cities and in need of what was then called "character building". These trips were the genesis of current modern sail training, using manually operated ships and the harsh discipline imposed by the sea to further personal development and taking those disadvantaged by circumstance to benefit from the experience.[1]

By the end of World War II, the numbers of traditionally rigged sailing ships left were dwindling and public interest waned. After the German school ship Niobe had sunk in 1932, killing 69, the loss of the Pamir in 1957 and the Albatross in 1961 drew further ill will and seemed to signal the end of an era.[2]

Modern sail training edit

 
Cadets man headsails sheets on the Eagle

In what was conceived to be last great gathering of square-riggers under sail, Bernard Morgan and Greville Howard persuaded a number of ship owners to join together in a sort of farewell salute in 1956, organizing a race from Torbay on the South Coast of England to race informally across the Bay of Biscay to Lisbon in Portugal. Five square rigged school ships entered the race, Denmark's Danmark, Norway's Christian Radich and Sorlandet, Belgium's Mercator and Portugal's first Sagres. The vessels would meet again the following year and every year since in an annual series that would astonish its original organizers today. Old vessels were saved or repaired and new purpose built sail training vessels were commissioned. With renewed interest in the age of sail, national sail training associations affiliated to Sail Training International (STI) (formerly "Sail Training Association") were organized and large summer events find upwards of 100 ships racing across the oceans.

Crew exchanges allow young people from one country to sail with those from another. Long before the end of the Cold War, ships from Russia and Poland (which in some cases had been built in Germany) joined the International Fleet in 1974. A limited exchange between the East and West was initiated. One of the largest of the affiliate organizations of the STI is the American Sail Training Association (ASTA). Founded in 1973 with a handful of vessels, it has since grown to encompass an international organization with more than 250 tall ships representing 25 different countries. The UK National Member of STI is the Association of Sail Training Organisations (ASTO) Founded in 1972, http://www.asto.org.uk

Square rigged seamanship was in danger of becoming a lost art. As the 1997 restoration of the USS Constitution neared completion, the United States Navy called on the crew of HMS Bounty[3] to train her sailors to sail the vessel as originally intended.

Many boats are historical vessels and replicas which require coordinated manual labor to sail, operating in the original tradition proposed by Alan Villiers and Irving Johnson such as the Picton Castle while others are purpose built educational platforms carrying out scientific research under sail such as the Robert C. Seamans and the Corwith Cramer of the Sea Education Association. Another new direction is the development of floating maritime heritage centres, connected to a sail training organisation, and often in co-ordination with land based maritime museums. Tall Ship Atyla is one such example of this, with visitors to the Bilbao Maritime Museum enjoying free entry to the ship during the winter months when she is moored nearby. As the crew of the Irving Johnson and the award-winning program at the Los Angeles Maritime Institute like to say "We do not train youth for a life at sea ... we use the sea to educate youth for life".

Vessel classifications edit

 
USCGC Eagle, a barque

Tall ships have been found to be effective platforms for sail training as they combine many elements fundamental to sail training. A "tall ship" is not a strictly defined type of vessel. The term is commonly used today to define a large, traditionally rigged vessel, whether or not is it technically a full-rigged ship. For example, the USCGC Eagle is technically a barque. A tall ship is usually defined by the topmast and topsails she carries as opposed to the modern high-aspect-ratio rigs and marconi mains carried by the sloops and yawls seen in every harbor today.

For the purpose of classification and race rating, the STI divides tall ships into the following classes :

Class A: All vessels over 160 feet in length overall, regardless of rig, and square rigged vessels over 120 feet in length.
Class A; Division II: All square rigged vessels less than 120 feet in length.
Class B: Fore-and-aft rigged vessels between 100 feet and 160 feet in length
Class C: All other fore-and-aft rigged vessels at least 30 feet long at the waterline.

The United States Coast Guard classifies vessels based on their intended use and structure, prescribing requirements for captain and crew manning, waters the vessel may operate in, number of passengers allowed and minimum safety equipment required.

With the exception of uninspected vessels, all such vessels are inspected annually and issued a Certificate of Inspection (COI) which must be displayed on the vessel and spells out the requirements that vessel must maintain.

Sailing School Vessel (SSV): Inspected under Title 46, Subchapter R of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). An SSV is a vessel of less than 500 gross tons carrying six or more sailing school students or instructors, primarily propelled by sail, and operated by a nonprofit educational organization exclusively for the purpose of sailing education.
Passenger Vessel: Certified according to the size and number of passengers (not engaged in educational activities or in the operation of the vessel) carried under Title 46 of the CFR.
Subchapter C: Uninspected vessels which operate with no more than six passengers.
Subchapter T: Small passenger vessels of under 100 gross tons that carry more than six passengers and are required to pass regular USCG inspection of the ship and all onboard equipment.
Subchapter K: Small passenger vessels of under 100 gross tons that carry more than 150 passengers and are required to pass regular USCG inspection of the ship and all onboard equipment.
Subchapter H: Passenger vessels of more than 100 gross tons that carry passengers for hire and are required to pass regular USCG inspection of the ship and all onboard equipment.
Attraction Vessel: Certification is required whenever a vessel is open to public boarding or conducts dockside programs. The vessel may be permanently moored to a pier, or it may be certified under one or more of the above subchapters, but the Attraction Vessel COI certifies its safety for dockside and visitation only.
Oceanographic Research Vessel (ORV): Certified under Subchapter U of Title 46 of the CFR. An ORV is a vessel employed exclusively in either oceanographic (saltwater) or limnologic (freshwater) instruction and/or research, and is not necessarily equipped for passengers or other non-professionals.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jonathan King (1 January 1988). Australia's First Fleet: the voyage and the re-enactment 1788/1988. Fairfax. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-947178-56-7. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  2. ^ Parrott, Daniel S. (26 January 2004). Tall Ships Down: The Last Voyages of the Pamir, Albatross, Marques, Pride of Baltimore, and Maria Asumpta. McGraw-Hill Professional. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-07-143545-1. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 November 2012. Retrieved 11 October 2010. The highlight of his career, however, is the two years and over 15 voyages spent training the crew of "Old Ironsides," the U.S.S. Constitution. He was at the helm as guest Captain/Advisor for the ship's inaugural sail in 1997 after 116 years of being dormant, a moment he remembers as "awe-inspiring," as many in his position would.

Further reading edit

  • American Sail Training Association; Dickinson, Jonathan; Wood, David V V (10 April 2000). Sail Tall Ships!: A Directory of Sail Training and Adventure at Sea. American Sail Training Association. ISBN 978-0-9636483-5-8. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Apollonio, Spencer (15 June 2001). The last of the Cape Horners: firsthand accounts from the final days of the commercial tall ships. Brassey's. ISBN 978-1-57488-409-8. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Crockett, Rigel (10 March 2005). Fair wind and plenty of it: a modern-day tall ship adventure. Rodale. ISBN 978-1-59486-160-4. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Dana, Richard Henry (1 January 2007). Two Years Before the Mast. Digireads.com Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4209-2909-6. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Johnson, Irving (1 January 1995). The Peking Battles Cape Horn. Ingram Pub Services. ISBN 978-0-930248-07-9. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Koza, Thaddeus (2009). Tall Ships: the Fleet for the 21st Century (5 ed.). Tide-Mark Pr Ltd. ISBN 978-1-59490-595-7. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Macdonald-Smith, Ian (2001). Setting Sail for the New Millennium: Tall Ships 2000 Race. Just Clicked Publications. ISBN 978-0-9688838-0-8. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Newby, Eric (1 July 2008). The Last Grain Race. Lonely Planet. ISBN 978-1-74179-526-4. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Parrott, Daniel S. (26 January 2004). Tall Ships Down: The Last Voyages of the Pamir, Albatross, Marques, Pride of Baltimore, and Maria Asumpta. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-143545-1. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Peffer, Randall S. (1 January 2000). Logs of the Dead Pirates Society: A Schooner Adventure Around Buzzards Bay. Sheridan House, Inc. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-57409-095-6. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  • Villiers, Alan (2006). Cruise of the Conrad. Sheridan House. ISBN 978-1-57409-241-7. Retrieved 10 October 2010.

External links edit

  • At Sea Sail Training for a Voyage with an International Crew in Europe!
  • CLASS AFLOAT West Island College International – S.V. Concordia, S.Y. Fryderyk Chopin

sail, training, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style January 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sail training news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message From its modern interpretations to its antecedents when maritime nations would send young naval officer candidates to sea e g see Outward Bound sail training provides an unconventional and effective way of building many useful skills on and off the water Built in 1914 as Grossherzog Friedrich August a school training ship for the German merchant marine the since 1921 Norwegian owned Statsraad Lehmkuhl is one of the oldest sail training ships in service Contents 1 Background 2 Genesis in the 1930s 3 Modern sail training 4 Vessel classifications 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editBy 1900 most commercial sailing vessels were struggling to turn a profit in the face of competition from more modern steam ships which had become efficient enough to steam shorter great circle routes between ports instead of the longer trade wind routes used by sailing ships Ships were built larger to carry bulk cargoes more efficiently their rigs were simplified to reduce manning costs and speed was no longer a premium Owners shipped cargoes that were non perishable so that their dates of arrival which steam ships had started to guarantee were of less importance Finally as the Panama Canal was opened sailing ships were used in parts of the world where steam ships still found it hard to operate principally on the Chilean nitrate trade for fertilizers and explosive production in Europe and on the Australian grain trade Both Chilean and Australian ports were difficult to supply with coal for steamships to refuel Also both routes to Europe went round Cape Horn The end of the First World War saw a brief return to profitability as all ship types were in scarce supply due to wartime losses but that boom became bust as many new steam ships were built to replace the sailing ships that were lost Genesis in the 1930s edit nbsp Italian navy training ship Amerigo Vespucci launched in 1931 While many countries of the world operated sailing ships as training vessels for officers in their Merchant Marine in the 1920s and 30s several sailing ship owners such as Carl Laeisz and Gustaf Erikson determined that there was still a profit to be made from the last of the sailing ships Erikson purchased existing ships that required the minimum of capital investment and repaired them with parts cannibalised from other ships Identifying the bulk cargo routes that would still offer paying freights he manned the ships with a smattering of paid experienced officers Some of the deckhands were apprentices from steamship lines and other adventurous youth who had paid a premium to sail while being trained some recruited for very modest salaries The apprentices were considered trainees and were the first formalization of sail trainers with crew drawn from members of the public who just went for the adventure as opposed to a career With manning costs netted out on Erikson s balance sheet the ships continued to return a paper profit However Erikson was under no illusions as to the long term profitability of his venture which depended on ignoring the depreciation on his ships and a shrinking supply of sound hulls and rigs The company would use their profits to diversify into steam after World War II While the shipping companies of Erickson and F Laeisz gradually turned to steam the next generation of captains were climbing up the hawsehole and taking command of their own vessels redefining sail training as a purely educational endeavour with trainees as the cargo From 1932 through 1958 Irving Johnson and his wife Electa Exy Johnson circumnavigated the world 7 times with amateur youth crews on board their vessels named Yankee Over the years their voyages were featured in books they authored and in National Geographic magazines and TV specials like Irving Johnson High Seas Adventurer Their archives are at Mystic Seaport Connecticut Australian Alan Villiers purchased the old school ship George Stage from Denmark in 1934 Renaming her the Joseph Conrad he sailed her round the world with no paying cargo and a crew of youth who had paid to be there He also took as many non paying youth as he could afford to fit in the budget those he considered at risk on the streets of their inner cities and in need of what was then called character building These trips were the genesis of current modern sail training using manually operated ships and the harsh discipline imposed by the sea to further personal development and taking those disadvantaged by circumstance to benefit from the experience 1 By the end of World War II the numbers of traditionally rigged sailing ships left were dwindling and public interest waned After the German school ship Niobe had sunk in 1932 killing 69 the loss of the Pamir in 1957 and the Albatross in 1961 drew further ill will and seemed to signal the end of an era 2 Modern sail training edit nbsp Cadets man headsails sheets on the Eagle In what was conceived to be last great gathering of square riggers under sail Bernard Morgan and Greville Howard persuaded a number of ship owners to join together in a sort of farewell salute in 1956 organizing a race from Torbay on the South Coast of England to race informally across the Bay of Biscay to Lisbon in Portugal Five square rigged school ships entered the race Denmark s Danmark Norway s Christian Radich and Sorlandet Belgium s Mercator and Portugal s first Sagres The vessels would meet again the following year and every year since in an annual series that would astonish its original organizers today Old vessels were saved or repaired and new purpose built sail training vessels were commissioned With renewed interest in the age of sail national sail training associations affiliated to Sail Training International STI formerly Sail Training Association were organized and large summer events find upwards of 100 ships racing across the oceans Crew exchanges allow young people from one country to sail with those from another Long before the end of the Cold War ships from Russia and Poland which in some cases had been built in Germany joined the International Fleet in 1974 A limited exchange between the East and West was initiated One of the largest of the affiliate organizations of the STI is the American Sail Training Association ASTA Founded in 1973 with a handful of vessels it has since grown to encompass an international organization with more than 250 tall ships representing 25 different countries The UK National Member of STI is the Association of Sail Training Organisations ASTO Founded in 1972 http www asto org ukSquare rigged seamanship was in danger of becoming a lost art As the 1997 restoration of the USS Constitution neared completion the United States Navy called on the crew of HMS Bounty 3 to train her sailors to sail the vessel as originally intended Many boats are historical vessels and replicas which require coordinated manual labor to sail operating in the original tradition proposed by Alan Villiers and Irving Johnson such as the Picton Castle while others are purpose built educational platforms carrying out scientific research under sail such as the Robert C Seamans and the Corwith Cramer of the Sea Education Association Another new direction is the development of floating maritime heritage centres connected to a sail training organisation and often in co ordination with land based maritime museums Tall Ship Atyla is one such example of this with visitors to the Bilbao Maritime Museum enjoying free entry to the ship during the winter months when she is moored nearby As the crew of the Irving Johnson and the award winning program at the Los Angeles Maritime Institute like to say We do not train youth for a life at sea we use the sea to educate youth for life Vessel classifications edit nbsp USCGC Eagle a barque Tall ships have been found to be effective platforms for sail training as they combine many elements fundamental to sail training A tall ship is not a strictly defined type of vessel The term is commonly used today to define a large traditionally rigged vessel whether or not is it technically a full rigged ship For example the USCGC Eagle is technically a barque A tall ship is usually defined by the topmast and topsails she carries as opposed to the modern high aspect ratio rigs and marconi mains carried by the sloops and yawls seen in every harbor today For the purpose of classification and race rating the STI divides tall ships into the following classes Class A All vessels over 160 feet in length overall regardless of rig and square rigged vessels over 120 feet in length Class A Division II All square rigged vessels less than 120 feet in length Class B Fore and aft rigged vessels between 100 feet and 160 feet in length Class C All other fore and aft rigged vessels at least 30 feet long at the waterline The United States Coast Guard classifies vessels based on their intended use and structure prescribing requirements for captain and crew manning waters the vessel may operate in number of passengers allowed and minimum safety equipment required With the exception of uninspected vessels all such vessels are inspected annually and issued a Certificate of Inspection COI which must be displayed on the vessel and spells out the requirements that vessel must maintain Sailing School Vessel SSV Inspected under Title 46 Subchapter R of the Code of Federal Regulations CFR An SSV is a vessel of less than 500 gross tons carrying six or more sailing school students or instructors primarily propelled by sail and operated by a nonprofit educational organization exclusively for the purpose of sailing education Passenger Vessel Certified according to the size and number of passengers not engaged in educational activities or in the operation of the vessel carried under Title 46 of the CFR Subchapter C Uninspected vessels which operate with no more than six passengers Subchapter T Small passenger vessels of under 100 gross tons that carry more than six passengers and are required to pass regular USCG inspection of the ship and all onboard equipment Subchapter K Small passenger vessels of under 100 gross tons that carry more than 150 passengers and are required to pass regular USCG inspection of the ship and all onboard equipment Subchapter H Passenger vessels of more than 100 gross tons that carry passengers for hire and are required to pass regular USCG inspection of the ship and all onboard equipment dd Attraction Vessel Certification is required whenever a vessel is open to public boarding or conducts dockside programs The vessel may be permanently moored to a pier or it may be certified under one or more of the above subchapters but the Attraction Vessel COI certifies its safety for dockside and visitation only Oceanographic Research Vessel ORV Certified under Subchapter U of Title 46 of the CFR An ORV is a vessel employed exclusively in either oceanographic saltwater or limnologic freshwater instruction and or research and is not necessarily equipped for passengers or other non professionals See also editOutdoor education Sailing Tall ships Training shipReferences edit Jonathan King 1 January 1988 Australia s First Fleet the voyage and the re enactment 1788 1988 Fairfax p 14 ISBN 978 0 947178 56 7 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Parrott Daniel S 26 January 2004 Tall Ships Down The Last Voyages of the Pamir Albatross Marques Pride of Baltimore and Maria Asumpta McGraw Hill Professional p 56 ISBN 978 0 07 143545 1 Retrieved 10 October 2010 TallShipBounty org Archived from the original on 1 November 2012 Retrieved 11 October 2010 The highlight of his career however is the two years and over 15 voyages spent training the crew of Old Ironsides the U S S Constitution He was at the helm as guest Captain Advisor for the ship s inaugural sail in 1997 after 116 years of being dormant a moment he remembers as awe inspiring as many in his position would Further reading editAmerican Sail Training Association Dickinson Jonathan Wood David V V 10 April 2000 Sail Tall Ships A Directory of Sail Training and Adventure at Sea American Sail Training Association ISBN 978 0 9636483 5 8 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Apollonio Spencer 15 June 2001 The last of the Cape Horners firsthand accounts from the final days of the commercial tall ships Brassey s ISBN 978 1 57488 409 8 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Crockett Rigel 10 March 2005 Fair wind and plenty of it a modern day tall ship adventure Rodale ISBN 978 1 59486 160 4 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Dana Richard Henry 1 January 2007 Two Years Before the Mast Digireads com Publishing ISBN 978 1 4209 2909 6 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Johnson Irving 1 January 1995 The Peking Battles Cape Horn Ingram Pub Services ISBN 978 0 930248 07 9 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Koza Thaddeus 2009 Tall Ships the Fleet for the 21st Century 5 ed Tide Mark Pr Ltd ISBN 978 1 59490 595 7 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Macdonald Smith Ian 2001 Setting Sail for the New Millennium Tall Ships 2000 Race Just Clicked Publications ISBN 978 0 9688838 0 8 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Newby Eric 1 July 2008 The Last Grain Race Lonely Planet ISBN 978 1 74179 526 4 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Parrott Daniel S 26 January 2004 Tall Ships Down The Last Voyages of the Pamir Albatross Marques Pride of Baltimore and Maria Asumpta McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 143545 1 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Peffer Randall S 1 January 2000 Logs of the Dead Pirates Society A Schooner Adventure Around Buzzards Bay Sheridan House Inc p 55 ISBN 978 1 57409 095 6 Retrieved 10 October 2010 Villiers Alan 2006 Cruise of the Conrad Sheridan House ISBN 978 1 57409 241 7 Retrieved 10 October 2010 External links editAt Sea Sail Training for a Voyage with an International Crew in Europe CLASS AFLOAT West Island College International S V Concordia S Y Fryderyk Chopin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sail training amp oldid 1162078793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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