Cruising Kitty Sailing Events List 2012

The Cruising Kitty’s Sailing Events List 2012
Here’s a list of the sailing and cruising events the Can Opener and I participated in in 2012:

Highlights


Total number of events: 

Total days on the water: 47

Sea miles gained this year: 3600

Next year… we‘d love to double it!  

Why count up where we’ve been? You gotta know where you‘ve been to know where you’re going. At least, we figure it can’t hurt. And it feels good too.

Next up: I’ve got the Can Opener working on our Cruising Resolutions for 2013. 

When he’s done, he can have the smoked oyster I’ve got waiting for him, riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight here! 



–Captain Cat

(transcribed by the Can Opener)

Cruising Kitty’s Lecture List for 2012

The Cruising Kitty’s Lecture List for 2012


Here’s the complete list of the cruising lectures the First Mate and I attended in 2012:
    1. London Boat Show: Electrics for Boaters
    2. London Boat Show: Diesel Engines
    3. Cruising Association: 35 Years of Cruising Sailboat Design with Chuck Paine
    4. Cruising Association: Sail Away
    5. Cruising Association: Jimmy Cornell Speaks
    6. Cruising Association: La Dolce Vita – Cruising the Islands of the Central Mediterranean 
    7. Cruising Association: Hostage – A Year at Gunpoint with Paul & Rachel Chandler
    8. Cruising Association: Cruising in Oceania
    9. Red Tabby Yacht Club: Ocean Passage Making
    10. Cruising Association: Mid-Ocean Things That Could Spoil Your Day
    11. Cruising Association: Power on Board
    12. Cruising Association: Communication At Sea
    13. Cruising Association: Victualling and Food Care
    14. Cruising Association: Fuel Care – Biocides and Bugs
    15. Cruising Association: Grenada
    16. Cruising Association: Yacht Preparation and Equipment
    17. Cruising Association: Medical Matters on Board
    18. Red Tabby Yacht Club: Southern Adventure
    19. Southampton Boat Show: On The Water Training!
    20. RYA VHF Course
    21. Cruising Association: Spain and Back in a Summer
    22. Cruising Association: Bora Bora and the Pacific Islands
    23. Cruising Association: Cape Horn and North to Alaska
    24. Red Tabby Yacht Club: Racing Rules for 2013~2016
    25. Cruising Association: Cruising to Arctic Norway

    Huh. It didn’t seem like so much at the time, but when you write it all down… it adds up nicely!



    –Captain Cat

    (transcribed by the Can Opener)

    Cruising Kitty Lecture List – 1st Half of 2012

    The Cruising Kitty’s Lecture List 
    1st half of 2012

    Here’s a list of the cruising lectures the Can Opener and I attended in the first half of 2012:

    This of course, meant endless note taking, transcribing and reviewing for the Can Opener.
    He met the challenge magnificently. We are very pleased with our First Mate’s continued progress. 

    Yesterday I gave him two more gold stars. He seemed pleased.



    –Captain Cat

    (transcribed by the Can Opener)

    Spring Cruising Lectures 2012

    The party begins!
    I have researched the lectures that the Can Opener will be attending with me this Spring 2012. With suitable amounts of smoked molluscs hidden in his backpack to ensure my nutritional requirements for the duration. Naturally.
    Here they are:

    This of course, will mean endless notetaking, transcribing and reviewing for the Can Opener.
    But he’s up to the challenge. We are very pleased with our First Mate’s continued progress. Yesterday I gave him two gold stars. If he keeps this up, tomorrow I may even share with him my mouse.
    –Captain Cat
    (transcribed by the Can Opener)

    Cruising Associations Compared

    Great Resources for Planning to Cruise

     

    Captain’s Log
    Stardate 2011117
    Once again my dear First Mate, Can Opener, veers toward madness. I caught him googling cruising associations around the world rather than poaching my breakfast eggs as he had specificallybeen instructed.
    I have already permitted him to join a yacht club. What possible use or need for a cruising association?
    I am currently snoozing on his research notes, hoping that ‘Out of sight, out of mind’ will prevail and he will soon give up this ludicrous project for good.
    Not likely, you say? It has worked before…
    Here follows the Can Opener’s notes on cruising associations:
    Seven Seas Cruising Association

    • founded: in 1952
    • headquartered: in Florida, USA
    • focus on: cruising around US, also rest of world
    • goals: sharing cruising information, fostering camaraderie, leaving a clean wake
    • membership: 10,000
    • services:
      • monthly bulletin to share info
      • website with info by country/area – worldwide updatable Port Guides
      • member tracking
      • 100+ Worldwide Cruising Stations who welcome visiting members
      • Marine Equipment Survey
      • Cruising Seminars and Weekend Workshops online
      • regional activities, meetups
      • ‘members only’ discounts, special offers
    • cost/year: $55.00 (£34) for electronic option

    Cruising Association
    • founded: in 1908
    • headquartered: in London, UK
    • focus on: cruising around EU, Baltics and the Med, also rest of world
    • membership: 4000
    • facilities: clubhouse with excellent library, restaurant, accommodation, lectures room
    • services:
      • members-only area of the site has 8,000+ pages of cruising information and 800+ downloadable documents, cruising guides
      • 10,000 volume Library, as well as a collection of worldwide charts for cruise planning
      • 200+ Honorary Local Representatives (HLRs), who can provide help and advice to members in foreign ports
      • quarterly magazine, newsletter
      • cruises, rallies, and meets in the summer
      • training, talks, seminars and social events in the winter
      • RYA theory for cruising and navigation levels taught
      • Crew bank and crew meetup in London
      • regional meetups around UK
      • ‘members only’ discounts, special offers at marinas etc, esp around the Med
    • cost/year: £118 for UK residents, £80.50 ($129) for overseas residents
    Bluewater Cruising Association
    • founded: in 1978
    • headquartered: Vancouver, Canada
    • focus on: cruising around west coast Canada, also rest of world
    • goals: seamanship and friendship for people with interest in offshore cruising
    • membership: 1000+
    • services:
      • monthly meetings in Vancouver, Calgary and Victoria with presentations by speakers who have cruised/ are cruising offshore
      • information on offshore preparation: provisioning, emergency first aid, exercise at sea, fibreglass repair, safety and navigational equipment, sail and rigging repairs
      • informal gatherings at locations in British Columbia’s Gulf Islands
      • magazine, Currents, published 10x/year
      • access to the members’ pages in this web site
    • cost/year: Can$110.00 for residents, Can$ 130 (US$128 / £80), plus Can$100 initiation fee (US$98 / £61)
    Cruising Club of America
    • founded: in 1921
    • headquartered: US-based, online only
    • goals: promote cruising, encourage development of cruising craft design, seamanship, share cruising info
    • membership: 1200, by invitation only – to sailors who have demonstrated offshore sailing experience in a command position
    • services:
      • some cruising guides and books by members
      • make awards
      • organise Bermuda Race
      • online info on safety, boat design, first aid, communication, clean environment
    • cost/year: not listed
    Conclusion
    Both the Cruising Association and the Seven Seas Cruising Association look like they have built up TONS of info from their membership. Each association’s information is weighted towards the region their membership is most heavily represented in.
    Seven Seas has online seminar distribution well set up and is the cheapest. 
    The Cruising Association gives you a nice foothold in expensive London with accommodation priced from £35/person/night (US$56). Apparently you can quickly save more than the cost of CA membership with their member discounts if you are cruising.
    Should I join? Easy answer: Join the cruising association that focuses on the area you plan to be cruising in.
    When to join? If you already cruising or in the serious planning stages, joining at least the association that focuses on the area you are/will be cruising in seems like a must.
    Will the Captain and I join? We are going to keep going to the Cruising Association lectures (non-members are welcome) and sign up as we get closer to our launch date. Our first cruising grounds will certainly be the Med.
    Immediately after discovering these notes, I skyped my good friend and confidante, She-of-Endless-Head-Scritches-and-Smoked-Salmon (also the Can Opener’s ex), to ask her professional opinion:
    ‘The Can Opener’s fine, take a valium, enough already! It’s harmless enough. Snooze on the papers and he’ll fuhget all about ‘em. Used to work for me. Ack! Stockbroker on th’other line, must dash!’

    Well, clear enough. The Can Opener’s ex’s advice has always served me well. Lovely woman. Back to my snoozerama on top of his notes! …and back to the hope that the he will return to (his version of) sanity soon.
    Not likely, you say? Hmm. You may be right…
    Have you ever belonged to a cruising association?
    Is it good value? Will you sign up again next year?
       
    –Captain Cat
    (transcribed by She-of-Endless-Head-Scritches-and-Smoked-Salmon)