Learn to Sail
All aboard for the world's best sailing holidays All aboard for the world's best sailing holidays |
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| Written by David Neville Williams | |
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If you fancy a holiday afloat, your first consideration should be the style of sailing you think you can manage. For those with less experience, flotilla sailing involves up to a dozen yachts travelling together with an experienced skipper on the lead boat. If you are a complete beginner wanting to learn to sail here at home, visit http://www.rya.org and click on “Training centres” for details of the nearest sailing school. Many people, though, prefer the warmer waters to be found abroad. Further afield, they offer more adventurous bareboat charters in Tahiti, Australia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Seychelles, as well as new destinations Tonga and Abacos in the Bahamas. Neilson, another major player, has bases in Greece, Turkey and Croatia. The Greek Ionian is one of the Mediterranean's most popular yachting destinations with gentle breezes, a scattering of picturesque islands and sheltered harbours. The Greek Peloponnese offers great sailing with a stunningly beautiful, unspoilt coastline to explore and very reliable winds. For bareboat and skippered charters further afield, it’s worth looking at the options on offer from The Moorings, one of the world's premier yacht charter companies with almost 40 years of experience. They feature about 800 monohulls and catamarans - most less than three years old - for hire in such exotic locations as the Seychelles, Bahamas and Mexico, along with South Pacific sailing centres in New Zealand, Tonga and Tahiti. For women who prefer to sail without men to distract them, Herizen run women-only yachting breaks in the British Virgin islands, Canada, Belize and Mexico. Back in the U.K., the old-established company Blakes cater for holidaymakers not wanting to travel too far before casting off, with yachts for hire in the popular destinations of the Norfolk Broads and Scotland. |