Why “Looking Around” Is the Most Important Sailing Skill
There’s a moment when learning to sail where everything feels like it’s happening at once.
The tiller’s in one hand. The mainsheet in the other. The crew is saying something about the jib. The wind shifts. The boat heels. And just as you think you’ve got it under control…
You realise you’ve been staring at the front of the boat the whole time.
Sound familiar?
👀 The Skill No One Teaches First
When I started sailing at the Upper Thames Sailing Club, I thought the most important skills were:
- Steering
- Trimming sails
- Not falling in
All useful… but not the skill.
The real skill?
👉 Looking around. Constantly. Properly. Intentionally.
It sounds simple. It isn’t.
🚤 Why It Matters (Especially on the Thames)
Sailing on a river like the Thames isn’t like being out at sea. It’s busy. It’s narrow. And things happen quickly.
If you’re not looking around, you’re missing:
- 🚤 Other boats (some much bigger than you!)
- 🌬️ Gusts of wind approaching across the water
- 🌊 Changes in current and flow
- ⚓ Moorings, buoys, and obstacles
- 🧠Where you actually need to go next
I’ve lost count of how many times we’ve been happily sailing along… only to realise we’re heading straight for trouble.
Usually because I was too busy admiring my excellent (and short-lived) sail trim.
🌬️ Reading the Water
Looking around isn’t just about avoiding collisions.
It’s how you see the wind.
- Dark patches on the water? More wind.
- Ripples changing direction? A shift is coming.
- Other boats suddenly heeling? That gust is heading your way next.
The sailors who glide past you effortlessly aren’t lucky.
They’re watching. Constantly.
🧠Free Speed (Yes, Really)
Here’s the surprising bit.
You don’t need new sails.
You don’t need a faster boat.
You don’t even need more strength.
👉 You just need to look around more.
By spotting wind early, you can:
- Head up slightly and gain speed
- Avoid dead patches
- Position yourself better for the next tack
It’s the cheapest performance upgrade in sailing.
And I like cheap upgrades.
😅 My Personal Failing (and Progress)
I’ll admit it.
I still forget.
I get focused on one thing—usually the wrong thing—and stop scanning.
Then:
- We slow down
- We miss a shift
- Someone overtakes us (again)
But on the days when I do remember to look around?
Everything improves.
Not dramatically. Not instantly.
But noticeably.
And in sailing, that’s often the difference between last place… and slightly less last.
🎯 How to Practise “Looking Around”
Like everything in sailing, it’s a skill you can train:
- 🔄 Scan every 10–15 seconds (make it a habit)
- 👥 Talk to your crew – they can see things you can’t
- 👀 Look behind as well as ahead
- 🌬️ Pick a patch of water and watch it – what’s it doing?
- ⛵ Compare with other boats – who’s faster and why?
It’s not about frantic head-turning.
It’s about calm, regular awareness.
⚓ Final Thought
If you only take one thing onto the water next time, make it this:
👉 Lift your head up and look around.
Because the boat doesn’t just go where you steer it…
It goes where the wind, water, and everything around you allow it to go.
And you won’t see any of that staring at the bow.
