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Prepare properly for getting back afloat, and you and your boat will be ready for a trouble-free season, Rubicon 3 Adventure’s John Manners shares his boat checklist
Boat checklist: 27 checks for the start of the season
With the days beginning to lengthen, February to April is the time to be getting your yacht ready for the season ahead, writes John Manners.
Preparation now is the key to a stress-free summer on the water.
Pre-season checks and maintenance should be a rewarding process, in which you learn more about your boat, develop some extra skills and see the rewards of your efforts.
Getting ready for the season can be divided into three distinct phases. Pre-launch (assuming your yacht is on the hard), post-launch checks, and a shake-down sail.
The pre-launch checks we cover below are the most critical to get done because the cost and inconvenience of having to lift a yacht back out again can be high.
Be ready to check all through hulls while in the sling. Credit: Alamy Stock Photo
Your hull, including your keel, skeg/and rudder, needs a good, thorough check over. Any issues that need fixing can be time consuming and GRP work needs suitable temperatures.
Once your yacht is launched, you’ll want to do a full systems check.
John Manners is chief engineer at the Marine Engineers for Rubicon 3 Adventure sailing (www.rubicon3 adventure.com). He served 24 years in the Royal Navy, finishing as a Chief Petty Officer. Credit: Rubicon 3 Adventures
You really should have your own specific boat checklist, so that you can be thorough and time efficient.
You can use our lists below as a good starting point if you don’t have one.
There’s always a surprising amount to check, so put a full day aside and ensure you find the issues now, not when you’re out on the water.
Finally, a boat can only really be signed off as season-ready once it has had a sail.
This is when the boat comes alive and all the stresses and strains will reveal if there are any as-of-yet undiscovered issues.
If there are any problems then a good day sail and overnight anchor should weed them out and, while any issues can be frustrating, at least they’ve been found before your first proper sail of the season.
Finally, when you finish this season, while they’re still fresh in your mind, make a list of any issues to fix before the next season and get the yacht properly winterised.
Check anodes and if electrically bonded, check it is working. Credit: Rubicon 3 Adventures
Continues below…
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A radio check (not on Ch 16) is appropriate for the start of the season. Credit: Rubicon 3 Adventures
Boat checklist: Getting an annual gas inspection is a check that should not be skipped. Credit: Graham Snook/Yachting Monthly
An emergency kit can rust and become inoperable. Make sure to check it before going sailing. Credit: Graham Snook/Yachting Monthly
Practice key manoeuvres on your first sail of the season. Credit: Richard Langdon
It’s time to get a couple of friends and family down to the boat and go for a sail.
You need to try and use every function on the boat, so pick a nice day when you can get all the sail up, the oven on, the anchor out and the nav and anchor lights used.
All going well, everything is ship shape, but if not, better to find out now.
Your marina handling skills (and confidence) may be a bit low so go easy on yourself (and you crew!) and give yourself time to hone your skills.
Make a cuppa and test your domestic systems. Credit: Richard Langdon
If everything is working fine, this sail is also a good opportunity to do a couple of man overboard drills, picking up a mooring buoy, getting the pole up and doing some navigation and tidal calculations.
Also rehearse making a MAYDAY call, fighting a fire and dealing with a CO alarm.
Faded skills affect everyone, so recognise that you do need to keep on practising these skills.
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