Yachting

(Wang) #1
MAY 2016 http://www.yachtingmonthly.com 59

I passed under the Queen
Elizabeth Bridge and
contemplated the traffi c roaring
above me and below in the
Dartford tunnel. The river starts
to narrow at this point but leisure
users are safely out of the main
shipping lane. I passed Tilbury
docks with a listening watch on
the port operations channel, then
it was time to let London VTS
know I was 40 minutes away from
the Thames barrage. I was told
which span to pass through. It’s
quite a sight – well worth a photo.


Beyond the O2 arena the
skyline is dominated by the
skyscrapers at Canary Wharf but
it was great to sail past the Royal
Naval College at Greenwich. On
arrival outside St Katherine’s
marina lock, I tied up at one of the
waiting buoys and enjoyed the
unusual view of the city.
The entrance to the marina
lock was almost the trickiest
part of the trip. Having avoided
all of the fast ferries, leisure and
commercial boats, there is a
two- or three-knot tide across the

I felt I had learned a number
of things from my year
single-handing a yacht.
■ Don’t fall overboard.
Getting back on board is
very hard and stopping the
boat is even harder
■ Always wear a lifejacket
with EPIRB or PLB attached
and carry a VHF radio
■ Don’t go below while
under way unless it’s totally
unavoidable
■ Prepare food in advance
and make allowances
for pitstops
■ Over-dress. It’s easier to
cool off than it is to warm up
■ Plan everything and share
your plan with someone
ashore who is able to
confi rm your location
■ Practise using a line
on a midships cleat (or a
genoa track) for springing
off and coming alongside
singlehanded
■ Be especially conservative
when anchoring. Leave
plenty of room. Allow for
wind and tide
■ Stay up to date with
battery, engine and all other
maintenance
■ Let everyone you
encounter know that you are
sailing solo. They will help!

Lessons learned


entrance to the lock. It feels a bit
like driving your car into a garage
at 30mph – it’s a small space that
needs to be approached ‘smartly’.
The return journey was broken
with an overnight at Limehouse
Marina as St Katherine’s doesn’t
lock out before about 0800,
followed by a long and uneventful
journey back to Ramsgate.
Finding myself stuck in Dover for
a day, due to high winds, was no
issue as there is plenty to explore
at the castle.
The fi nal hour of the fi nal leg
from Eastbourne to Portsmouth
was in the dark and rain, but I
was glad to be back in familiar
territory. Arriving home after six
days and 460 miles, I felt a huge
sense of achievement and a sense
of having totally cleared and
cleansed my mind.

Richard, 49, lives in Farnham, Surrey and works in IT
and telecoms. Having learned to sail Laser dinghies on
Rutland Water, his fi rst yachting experience was an Irish
Sea crossing in a Force 8. After a decade and a half of
chartering he bought Sugarwing, his Moody 42, in 2011
and keeps her in Gosport. Richard passed his Yachtmaster
Offshore in 2012 and has since cruised the Channel
Islands, the Isles of Scilly and the South Coast of England.

Richard Hales


On my way into
London I passed
the Dome

The end of my journey. I had
fi nally made it to Tower Bridge

Tower Bridge at night was an amazing sight
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