From First Boat to A-Rater: Why Sailing Clubs Need a Proper Progression Ladder
Every sailor starts somewhere.
For some, it is a slightly wobbly first sail in a club dinghy, wondering which rope does what, why the boom appears to have a personal grudge, and why the boat seems perfectly happy going in every direction except the one intended.
For others, it might be a youth training boat, a Wayfarer, a Toura, a Laser, a Topper, a Merlin Rocket, a National 12, or, one day, the magnificent and slightly terrifying sight of a Thames A-Rater with a huge rig towering over the river.
But the important question is this:
How do we help people move from that first uncertain sail to becoming confident club sailors, racers, crews, helms and custodians of historic classes?
Because if we do not create a route, many people never make the journey.
They learn the basics, sail a few times, perhaps race once, get confused, feel they are in the way, and quietly disappear. That is a great loss to them, to the club, and to the traditions that clubs like Upper Thames Sailing Club and Thames Sailing Club work so hard to preserve.
Sailing Is Not One Skill — It Is a Ladder
One of the mistakes we sometimes make is talking about sailing as if it is one thing.
“Can you sail?”
That sounds like a simple yes or no question. In reality, it is much more like asking, “Can you drive?”
Can you drive around a car park?
Can you reverse into a tight space?
Can you drive on a motorway in heavy rain?
Can you drive a lorry?
Can you drive a racing car?
Can you drive while someone shouts confusing instructions from the passenger seat?
Sailing is much the same.
There is a world of difference between sailing gently across the river in light winds, racing around marks in a mixed handicap fleet, handling a spinnaker, sailing a high-performance dinghy, foiling above the water, or crewing a Thames A-Rater in a gust with trees, moorings, stream and other boats all adding to the entertainment.
That does not mean the journey is impossible. It means it needs structure.
The First Step: Getting Afloat Without Terror
The first progression in sailing is not speed. It is not racing. It is not even elegance.
It is confidence.
At the beginning, a new sailor needs to understand the basics:
- Where to sit
- How to steer
- How the mainsail works
- How the jib works
- How to tack
- How to gybe
- How to stop
- How to come ashore
- How not to panic when the boat heels
- How to recover from mistakes
This is where the RYA training system is so useful. RYA Level 1 Start Sailing gives beginners a controlled introduction to sailing a dinghy. RYA Level 2 Basic Skills then builds the confidence and decision-making needed to sail in good conditions. For young sailors, the Youth Sailing Scheme provides a similar staged route through Stages 1 to 4.
That structure matters.
It gives new sailors a vocabulary, a safety framework and a sense that they are making progress. It also gives clubs a common starting point. Someone who has completed Level 2 should have a reasonable foundation, but that does not mean they are automatically ready for everything a club can throw at them.
Especially not on a river.
The River Adds Its Own Curriculum
Sailing on the Thames is not quite the same as sailing on a large open reservoir or coastal training area.
The River Thames has its own personality.
There are trees that steal the wind.
There are gusts that arrive like surprise exam questions.
There is stream.
There are moored boats.
There are shallows.
There are marks tucked into awkward corners.
There are wind shadows that make a perfectly good tack look like an act of optimism.
A beginner might complete a course and still need to learn the local water.
At Upper Thames Sailing Club, for example, there are skills that belong specifically to that stretch of river: short tacking, reading the wind on the water, approaching marks in light airs, sailing in traffic, and understanding how much room is really needed to turn.
This is where a club progression scheme could be extremely valuable.
The RYA courses give the foundation. The club then adds the local knowledge.
From Single-Hander to Double-Hander
A common next step is moving from a simple training boat into a double-handed boat such as a Toura, Wayfarer, Feva, Merlin Rocket or National 12.
This is a huge progression.
In a single-hander, you make your own mistakes. In a double-hander, you make them with a witness.
The crew and helm need to work together. The helm must communicate clearly. The crew must learn when to release, when to sheet in, when to move, and when not to pull the jib across too early during a tack.
I have learned that jib timing is not just a small detail. Get it wrong and the boat can slow, stall, or even try to turn back the way it came. Get it right and the boat flows through the tack beautifully.
A double-hander teaches:
- Communication
- Balance
- Crew movement
- Sail trim
- Teamwork
- Trust
- Recovery when things go wrong
This is also the stage where many adults become much better sailors. They start to understand not just what they are doing, but why the boat behaves as it does.
The Toura as a Training Bridge
A boat like the RS Toura is very useful in a club progression system.
It is stable enough to teach confidence, large enough for an instructor or experienced sailor to join in, and capable enough to introduce proper sailing skills. It can be used for first helming, crewing practice, race training, spinnaker preparation and family sailing.
For a club, this type of boat is not just a club boat. It is a bridge.
It can take someone from “I have done a course” to “I am ready to join in.”
That bridge is often the missing part of sailing development.
A person may have completed a course, but still not feel ready to race. They may not own a boat. They may not know who to ask. They may feel that everyone else knows what they are doing.
A progression scheme gives them a route.
The Racing Step: From Sailing Around to Sailing With Purpose
The next stage is club racing.
This is where sailing suddenly becomes much more interesting and, at times, much more confusing.
A new racer has to learn:
- Starting sequences
- Course boards
- Marks
- Port and starboard
- Windward boat and leeward boat
- Room at the mark
- How to keep clear
- How to avoid getting trapped at the start
- How to finish without accidentally sailing another lap
Racing can be intimidating, but it is also one of the best ways to improve.
A sailor who cruises around for an hour may repeat the same few habits. A sailor who races has to tack, gybe, round marks, avoid other boats, read the wind, make decisions and deal with pressure.
That is why clubs should make racing easier to enter.
Not easier to win.
Easier to enter.
There is a big difference.
A club progression programme could include supported first races, buddy crews, race briefing sessions, simplified course explanations, and post-race chats where someone explains what happened without making the new sailor feel like they have just failed a driving test on water.
The Spinnaker Stage: When the Laundry Goes Flying
Sooner or later, someone says the word “spinnaker”.
This is usually followed by either excitement or fear.
A spinnaker is a wonderful sail. It is also a large, colourful way of discovering whether the crew, helm and wind are still on speaking terms.
Learning to use a spinnaker is a natural progression for sailors who are comfortable in a double-hander. It teaches downwind sailing, apparent wind, communication, timing, boat handling and the importance of preparation.
A club could run spinnaker evenings using suitable boats in light winds. The aim would not be to turn everyone into an expert instantly. It would be to remove the mystery.
The first session might simply cover:
- What the sail is for
- How it is rigged
- What the pole does
- How to hoist
- How to drop
- What can go wrong
- How to recover when it does
That last part is important. People are often less afraid of trying something when they know how to untangle the mess afterwards.
Performance Boats: National 12s, Merlins and the Next Challenge
Once sailors are comfortable in training boats and club racing, some will want a more responsive boat.
This is where classes such as the National 12, Merlin Rocket or other performance dinghies can become part of the journey.
A National 12 is not simply a faster version of a beginner boat. It is more sensitive, more responsive and less forgiving. It rewards balance, communication and accurate sail trim. It also teaches sailors to feel the boat.
That is a major progression.
At this level, sailors begin to understand that small changes matter:
- A few centimetres of body position
- A slightly better tack
- A smoother gybe
- Better acceleration after the start
- Keeping the boat flat
- Holding speed through disturbed wind
This is where coaching becomes valuable. Not formal classroom teaching necessarily, but short, focused sessions with experienced sailors.
A club might run “try a class” evenings, where new sailors can crew in different boats and discover what they enjoy.
Some will love single-handers.
Some will love double-handed racing.
Some will love the teamwork.
Some will love the technical details.
Some will simply love going faster.
That variety is one of the strengths of sailing.
Foiling: A Different Branch of the Tree
Foiling is another possible progression, although perhaps not the most obvious one for every river club.
It represents a very modern branch of sailing: speed, balance, control and flight. For sailors who want a new challenge, foiling can be an exciting development beyond conventional dinghy sailing.
But it should be seen as one branch of the progression tree, not the only “advanced” route.
A sailor might progress towards foiling.
Another might progress towards team racing.
Another might become an excellent safety boat helm.
Another might become a race officer.
Another might become an A-Rater crew.
Progression does not have to mean everyone going in the same direction. It means every sailor can see a next step.
The A-Rater Problem: How Do We Keep the Tradition Alive?
Now we come to the thoroughbred: the Thames A-Rater.
These boats are not just racing dinghies. They are living history. They are spectacular, powerful, beautiful and slightly outrageous in the best possible way.
They are also not beginner boats.
A Thames A-Rater needs skill, teamwork and confidence. With a tall rig, large sail area and a crew of three, it is not the sort of boat where someone should simply be thrown in and told, “You’ll pick it up as you go along.”
Although, to be fair, that is probably how quite a lot of sailing has traditionally worked.
If clubs want to keep A-Rater racing alive, they need people. They need crews. They need helms. They need younger sailors, adult beginners, experienced dinghy sailors and practical people who are willing to learn.
The boats themselves may be historic, but the crew pipeline has to be deliberately created.
An A-Rater Progression Scheme
Clubs like Upper Thames Sailing Club and Thames Sailing Club could create their own A-Rater progression route. It would not need to replace RYA training. It would sit on top of it.
A possible pathway might look like this:
Stage 1: Basic Sailing Confidence
The sailor completes RYA Level 1 and Level 2, or reaches an equivalent standard through club training.
They can steer, tack, gybe, stop, launch, recover and understand basic safety.
Stage 2: Double-Handed Experience
The sailor spends time in a boat such as a Toura, Wayfarer, Feva, Merlin or National 12.
They learn crewing, helming, communication, balance and sail handling.
Stage 3: Club Racing Introduction
The sailor joins supported club races, perhaps with an experienced helm or crew.
They learn starts, marks, right of way, course boards and how racing works on the river.
Stage 4: River Skills
The sailor learns the local conditions: wind shadows, stream, short tacking, moorings, landing areas and the particular behaviour of the club reach.
This is especially important on the Thames.
Stage 5: Specialist Skills
The sailor is introduced to spinnakers, performance boats, race tactics and more advanced boat handling.
This stage builds confidence and awareness.
Stage 6: A-Rater Shore School
Before sailing an A-Rater, the sailor has a shore-based introduction.
This could include:
- Parts of the boat
- Rig layout
- Crew roles
- Safety considerations
- Launching and recovery
- How the boat differs from a normal dinghy
- What to do in a gust
- What not to touch unless asked
That last one may be particularly important.
Stage 7: First A-Rater Sail as Third Crew
The sailor joins an experienced crew in suitable conditions.
The aim is not racing glory. The aim is familiarity.
They learn where to sit, when to move, what to watch, how commands are given and how the boat feels.
Stage 8: Regular Crewing
The sailor becomes part of a crew pool.
They sail regularly, gradually take on more responsibility, and perhaps move between boats to learn different approaches.
Stage 9: Advanced Crew or Helm Development
Those who want to go further can learn more technical rig control, race strategy and eventually helming.
Not everyone needs to helm an A-Rater. Good crews are just as essential.
Clubs Need Their Own Courses
The RYA system is excellent for nationally recognised training. It gives structure, safety and consistency.
But each club has its own boats, water, traditions and racing culture.
That means clubs should not be afraid to create their own internal courses.
Not necessarily formal certificates. Not bureaucratic paperwork. Just clear pathways.
For example:
- “First Race Evening”
- “Toura to Racing”
- “Introduction to Double-Handers”
- “Spinnaker Confidence”
- “River Racing Skills”
- “A-Rater Crew Introduction”
- “Classic Boat Handling”
- “From Crew to Helm”
- “Safety Boat Support for Racing”
- “Understanding Club Race Duties”
These courses could be short, friendly and practical. They could run on summer evenings or quiet weekends. They could be led by experienced club sailors, instructors, race officers and boat owners.
The point is to make progress visible.
Why Progression Helps Retention
People stay in clubs when they feel they belong.
They stay when they know what to do next.
A new sailor who does Level 2 and then sees no obvious route may drift away. A new sailor who is invited to a supported race, then a Toura session, then a spinnaker evening, then a crewing opportunity, is much more likely to become part of the club.
Progression builds confidence, but it also builds relationships.
That is how clubs survive.
Not just through boats.
Not just through buildings.
Not just through racing calendars.
But through people being helped from one stage to the next.
The Tradition Will Not Preserve Itself
It is easy to admire a Thames A-Rater from the bank.
It is harder to create the next generation of people who can sail one.
If we want these boats to remain part of the living river, not just photographs in a clubhouse or memories from past regattas, we need progression.
We need beginners.
We need improvers.
We need crews.
We need helms.
We need patient mentors.
We need boat owners willing to invite people aboard.
We need clubs willing to make the route clear.
The journey from a first boat to an A-Rater may seem enormous, but it does not have to happen in one leap.
It happens one tack at a time.
First, you learn where to sit.
Then you learn how to steer.
Then you learn how to tack.
Then you learn how to race.
Then you learn how to crew.
Then one day someone says, “Would you like to come out in the A-Rater?”
And that may be the moment a sailor becomes part of a tradition much bigger than themselves.
Conclusion: Build the Ladder and People Will Climb It
Sailing clubs should not simply hope that new sailors will somehow find their way from beginner courses into racing fleets and historic classes.
Some will. Many will not.
A better answer is to build a ladder.
Use the RYA courses as the foundation. Add club-specific training on top. Teach the local water. Create supported racing. Offer crewing opportunities. Introduce performance boats carefully. Make the spinnaker less frightening. Let people experience boats they might never otherwise dare to approach.
And above all, create a pathway into the boats that define the club’s character.
For Thames river clubs, that must include the Thames A-Rater.
Because traditions do not stay alive because they are old.
They stay alive because new people are invited in.
