Is it worth going to the free seminars and lectures at the Dinghy Show?
Absolutely — the free seminars/lectures are one of the best value bits of the Dinghy Show… as long as you treat them like a sailing session, not background noise while you’re “just popping past Rooster for a quick look” (famous last words).
Are the Dinghy Show talks actually “free”?
They’re included with your show entry (no separate ticket), spread across multiple stages/zones, so you can dip in and out all day. The 2026 show programme is laid out across three stages: Sunsail Main Stage, Knowledge Zone, and NextGen Zone.
When they’re 100% worth it
1) You want “steal-this-one-thing” coaching
A good 30–45 minute talk can save you an entire season of repeating the same mistake (hello, late tacks and panic gybes). The schedule spans performance, technique, wellbeing, rules, and more.
2) You’re the club’s “I’ll just Google it later” person
You won’t. You’ll forget. A live talk gives you:
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the key principle
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a memorable example
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and often a Q&A where someone asks your exact question out loud (thank you, brave stranger)
3) You’re buying kit (or about to)
Listen first, buy after. Talks can stop you purchasing something shiny-but-wrong (“These boots are perfect!” …for Antarctica).
4) You’re newer / returning / “65+ and learning”
The Knowledge Zone style sessions are ideal for turning confusion into confidence — especially when everything on the show floor is screaming: “NEW FOIL TECHNOLOGY!!!”
When they’re not worth it
1) You already know the topic and you’re there for networking
If your real mission is “corner a class association legend and ask about rigs”, do that.
2) You’re running on empty
If you’re tired/hungry/overheated, you’ll sit through a brilliant session and remember only: “there was a PowerPoint and I think sailing involves wind.”
3) You’re using talks as procrastination
If you’ve spent three hours “learning about downwind strategy” but haven’t visited the chandlers list you came for… that’s not education, that’s avoidance with seating.
How to get maximum value (without turning it into school)
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Pick 2–3 “must attend” sessions, then leave gaps for wandering.
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Arrive 5–10 minutes early for popular speakers so you’re not standing at the back like a spare rudder.
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Take one photo of a slide (only if allowed) and write three bullets in your phone: Idea / Drill / One change I’ll make.
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Use Q&A ruthlessly: ask one practical question you can apply next weekend.
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Plan your day from the schedule so you’re not sprinting between halls like it’s a pursuit race.
A very PMR Sailing take
Think of the talks as your “shore-based coaching session” before you spend money on kit or commit to a whole new way of sailing. If you come home with one habit changed, they’ve paid for themselves.
And yes, the show is on 21–22 February 2026 at Farnborough International — so if you’re reading this today, get your coffee, get your plan, and try not to buy anything you can’t lift with one hand.




