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A Sigma 33 One Design keelboat racing on Dublin Bay Photo: AfloatA Sigma 33 One Design keelboat racing on Dublin Bay Photo: Afloat

ISA 'Try Sailing' Initiative Aims to Encourage New Sailors

8th March 2016
People at every level can get involved with bringing newcomers into the sport. Showing how it’s done with a Toppper Topaz at a Try Sailing Women on Water event is former Olympian Cathy MacAleavey (left) with sailing newbie Sarah Byrne. People at every level can get involved with bringing newcomers into the sport. Showing how it’s done with a Toppper Topaz at a Try Sailing Women on Water event is former Olympian Cathy MacAleavey (left) with sailing newbie Sarah Byrne. Credit: ISA

The Irish Sailing Association’s development of the “Try Sailing” programme for 2016 moves towards fresh action tomorrow with confirmation of a series of initiatives based on an out-reach approach by every form of sailing writes W M Nixon.

“Try Sailing” aims to grow further the policy of putting clubs in contact with potential sailing enthusiasts, while encouraging clubs to recognise that they have to provide a welcoming and hands-on attitude to the management of new groups, and their continuing mentoring as they move further into the worlds of boats.

In recent months – right through some of the worst periods of winter storms, as it happens – the ISA’s specialised Access & Participation Policy Group has been holding meetings in several locations to hear local views and see how best to move the programme forward. The group is co-ordinated by the ISA’s Western Region Development Officer Ciaran Murphy, who is based on the northwest shore of Galway Bay, and he brought together key administrative and teaching talent from many parts of Ireland.

During its research and planning phase, the APPG has included Muriel Rumball of the Irish National Sailing School in Dun Laoghaire, round the world voyager and former dinghy champion Pat Murphy of Sutton and Howth, who has tirelessly worked throughout his long sailing career in encouraging people afloat to enjoy sailing with the emphasis on enjoyment, Pierce Purcell from the southeast corner of Galway Bay who has made remarkable strides in improving communications and mutual support among sailors at every level on the western seaboard, and ISA President David Lovegrove, who has been and continues to be involved in the sport at every level both as a Race Officer to international standard, and as a participant who has from time to time built his own championship-winning racing dinghies.

Assembling such specialist talent was quite enough to be going along with, but getting them together at key stages in different venues during the stormiest winter on record provided an unexpected challenge, with Storm Imogen bringing a tree down on the railway line from Galway just as key members of the APPG were hurtling back eastwards on the Dublin express. But they escaped unscathed, and tomorrow’s soft launch of the programme on time shows that it will take more than Imogen to deflect this group now that they have their plans in shape.

Basically, Try Sailing 2016 will see a more thorough implementation of initiatives which have been introduced in trial form in recent years, doing so in the firm belief that you have to take your message to the people at least as much as you expect the people to come to your club if you’ve made it clear that all are welcome - and genuinely welcome at that. The offhand provision of facilities and training services are not what is required – this is something that has to come from the heart.

The sub-programmes which will be operating under the Try Sailing banner include:

• Women on Water

• Sailability

• Outreach to schools

• Corporate group approaches

• Specialist community group interactions.

The programme has been planned with special adaptations to suit the varying needs and requirements of what are, after all, widely disparate target “markets”, and as the Try Sailing initiative develops through the year, it will be closely monitored for fine tuning to meet any further needs which may not have come up in the first wave of research and analysis.

Published in Sailing Schools
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How to sail, sailing clubs and sailing boats plus news on the wide range of sailing events on Irish waters forms the backbone of Afloat's sailing coverage.

We aim to encompass the widest range of activities undertaken on Irish lakes, rivers and coastal waters. This page describes those sailing activites in more detail and provides links and breakdowns of what you can expect from our sailing pages. We aim to bring jargon free reports separated in to popular categories to promote the sport of sailing in Ireland.

The packed 2013 sailing season sees the usual regular summer leagues and there are regular weekly race reports from Dublin Bay Sailing Club, Howth and Cork Harbour on Afloat.ie. This season and last also featured an array of top class events coming to these shores. Each year there is ICRA's Cruiser Nationals starts and every other year the Round Ireland Yacht Race starts and ends in Wicklow and all this action before July. Crosshaven's Cork Week kicks off on in early July every other year. in 2012 Ireland hosted some big international events too,  the ISAF Youth Worlds in Dun Laoghaire and in August the Tall Ships Race sailed into Dublin on its final leg. In that year the Dragon Gold Cup set sail in Kinsale in too.

2013 is also packed with Kinsale hosting the IFDS diabled world sailing championships in Kinsale and the same port is also hosting the Sovereign's Cup. The action moves to the east coast in July with the staging of the country's biggest regatta, the Volvo Dun Laoghaire regatta from July 11.

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Sailing Events

Punching well above its weight Irish sailing has staged some of the world's top events including the Volvo Ocean Race Galway Stopover, Tall Ships visits as well as dozens of class world and European Championships including the Laser Worlds, the Fireball Worlds in both Dun Laoghaire and Sligo.

Some of these events are no longer pure sailing regattas and have become major public maritime festivals some are the biggest of all public staged events. In the past few seasons Ireland has hosted events such as La Solitaire du Figaro and the ISAF Dublin Bay 2012 Youth Worlds.

There is a lively domestic racing scene for both inshore and offshore sailing. A national sailing calendar of summer fixtures is published annually and it includes old favorites such as Sovereign's Cup, Calves Week, Dun Laoghaire to Dingle, All Ireland Sailing Championships as well as new events with international appeal such as the Round Britain and Ireland Race and the Clipper Round the World Race, both of which have visited Ireland.

The bulk of the work on running events though is carried out by the network of sailing clubs around the coast and this is mostly a voluntary effort by people committed to the sport of sailing. For example Wicklow Sailing Club's Round Ireland yacht race run in association with the Royal Ocean Racing Club has been operating for over 30 years. Similarly the international Cork Week regatta has attracted over 500 boats in past editions and has also been running for over 30 years.  In recent years Dublin Bay has revived its own regatta called Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta and can claim to be the country's biggest event with over 550 boats entered in 2009.

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