Day 13 – What Does ‘Competent Crew’ Actually Mean?
“What Does ‘Competent Crew’ Actually Mean?”
With just under two weeks to go before Croatia, I thought it might be a good idea to work out what I’m actually supposed to be competent at…
Because at the moment, I’m very competent at:
- Making tea
- Pointing at things I don’t understand
- Looking confident while quietly panicking
Apparently, the Royal Yachting Association has slightly higher expectations.
So… what is “Competent Crew”?
The Competent Crew course is designed to turn you from:
“Passenger with enthusiasm”
into
“Useful human being on a yacht”
You’re not expected to skipper the boat — thankfully — but you are expected to help make it sail properly and safely.
The Core Skills (That I’m Hoping to Master…)
Knots (Yes… they matter)
You’ll need to tie a few properly — not just “that one that sort of works”.
Expect things like:
- Bowline
- Clove hitch
- Figure of eight
(And yes, I’ve written about these here https://pmrsailing.uk/sailing-lessons/sailing-terms-list/)
Because nothing says “novice” like a knot that comes undone at the wrong moment…
Steering (Without zig-zagging like a drunk duck)
Helming a yacht is very different from a dinghy:
- Slower response
- Bigger consequences
- More people watching
Keeping a steady course will be… interesting.
Sail Handling (Pull this… but not too much)
You’ll be expected to:
- Hoist sails
- Trim sails
- Tidy ropes (apparently this matters a lot)
Timing is everything — something I’ve already discovered when messing up the jib on the Thames.
Living Onboard (The bit no one warns you about)
This is where it gets real.
You’ll learn:
- How to cook without launching the frying pan
- How to sleep while the boat creaks
- How to use a marine toilet without becoming that person
This might be the hardest part of the course…
So… will I be “Competent”?
By the end of the week, I should:
- Know what’s going on
- Be able to help properly
- Not get in the way (as much)
Which, to be fair, is a solid upgrade.
Final Thought
“Competent Crew” doesn’t mean perfect.
It just means:
You’re someone others are happy to have onboard.
I’m aiming for that.
Anything beyond that is a bonus.


