NOTICE

19 March 2020

Dear Members

In light of the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak and advice from by World Sailing, SAS and Western Cape Sports Council, SASCOC, and City of Cape Town, to place restrictions to curb the spread of the virus, the committee has suspended all club events until the end of the Easter holidays (14 April 2020). At this time the committee will reassess the situation.

The Southern Charter SAS WC Interschools has provisionally been rescheduled for 1-2 August 2020.

TSL events will resume 19 April depending on committee reassessment of the situation after Easter holidays.

While club events have been suspended, at this stage access to the water from the club has not been closed.

Please keep checking club website (www.imperialyachtclub.co.za) social media and club whatsapp group for latest updates.

Fair winds
Damian Gibbs


IMPERIAL YACHT CLUB is a family friendly sailing club with a focus on youth sailing and training. Sailing has a lot to offer the youth and we actively encourage children and parents from all backgrounds to participate in sailing by offering regular training and coaching at the club.

We have a number of weekend and school learn to sail coaching programs for different levels, from complete novice and beginner to learning to race, and beyond. Zandvlei provides an ideal nursery for beginner learner sailors with a sheltered “duckpond” and the larger lake allows parents and spectators to watch the sailing from the clubhouse. The vlei is well suited to small boat dinghy sailing as the sailors learn to sail close to the clubhouse.

Sailing is a truly extraordinary sport. Beyond the obvious physical and mental challenges, sailing teaches us a wide range of life lessons.

For a start, whether our sailing is recreational or competitive, we don’t do it on a static field, court or course like most ball sports, or even a static track like mountain biking or downhill skiing. The field we play on moves, sometimes imperceptibly, often unpredictably, and occasionally violently, under the influence of tide, current and wind. The main source of the power we draw from, using our physical capability and technical skills, is the invisible, turbulent, three-dimensional movement of the air around us.

What a wonderful metaphor for life and the world we all have to learn to live in!

As sailors, we learn very quickly to deal with the curved balls that the wind and sea throw at us.

We learn to be sensitive to the many subtle signals that give us clues as to what the water that supports us and the wind that drives us are likely to to do next.

We learn how to learn, and we discover how quickly the sea punishes us when we are slow to learn.

We learn the value of learning from others, and at the same time we experience the excitement of innovating, of embracing radical new thinking and exciting new technologies.

We learn the importance of dealing meticulously with detail, and we quickly learn the danger of losing sight of the big picture.

We learn how to move quickly and easily from thinking about the past: which side of the course was favoured on the downwind leg last round – to the present: how do I best get over the wave two meters in front of my bow – to the future: should I position myself for a stand-on or a gybe at the next weather mark.

Perhaps most importantly, we learn that the more we know, the better we understand how much more there is that we don’t yet know.

There may well be other sports that are as valuable in preparing young people to deal with life’s challenges, but I have difficulty thinking of one.

Dave Hudson
Lifelong sailer