Page 65 - br-july-2020
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July 2020                              July 2020

       eventually found. Fortunately my brother Jimmy was not in as   the chimney had
       fallen on his bed and smashed it.
       The  following  morning  we  were  shocked  and  devastated  to  see  how  much
       damage had been caused to our house by the storm.
       The house could not be saved as it was cracked from top to bottom , we felt very
       lucky to get out unharmed.
       The  neighbour’s  houses  suffered  damage  to  their  roofs,  but  ours  took  the  full
       force. It is something that I will never forget.
        By the then Pat Barnes now Patricia White


       THE BIGGEST CHALLENGE FOR THE

       ‘CRUISING COUPLE’


       In last month’s Parish Magazine we looked at the delights of safer sailing using a
       storm  trysail,  I  touched  on  the  fact  that  the  average  coastal  sailing  vessel  is
       designed  to  allow  the  crew  to  stay  in  the  cockpit  and  avoid  the  hazards  of
       working on the foredeck whilst ‘making way’.
       Modern  ‘roller  reefing’  of  headsails  and  the  reefing  (reducing  the  size)  of  the
       mainsail can be operated from the safety of the cockpit.  Design changes in the
       underwater profile of modern coastal yachts also allow easier manoeuvring when
       under power in marinas.
       Electronic navigation aids, GPS and effective means of communicating with The
       Coastguard  Service  also  add  (most  of  the  time)  to  both  a  better  awareness  of
       one’s position at sea and an enhanced feeling of security.
       All of these improvements allow two people (the archetypal ‘cruising couple’) to
       go  to  sea  in  coastal  and  offshore  waters  with  relative  safety  and  with  the
       knowledge that one does not need to be in one’s prime of physical condition to
       participate in the delights and challenges of leisure sailing.
       All good things, however, usually come at a price. Sailing is no exception.
       Three areas that create potential danger to ‘cruising couples’ are fatigue, failure
       to recognise the need for having similar, rather than complementary skills and a
       lack of awareness of declining physical strength.
       When  doing  a  100-mile  drive  to  see  family  and/or  grandchildren,  the  journey
       would normally entail a stop in a lay-by for a ‘cuppa’ and a 10-minute ‘zzzzz’.
       A 75 mile sail from Weymouth to Dartmouth is a good 12 hours in a kind, offshore

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