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Neal would do fine in San Francisco and
enjoy getting some extra polish on his skills. Anyone would learn something every day they sailed on San Francisco Bay. Sailing regularly in heavy winds is invaluable experience. Also, it's better to get comfortable in high winds, before that plus huge combined seas. People freak out in relation to their experience level. If you have seen 65 knot winds, then 45 knots is no sweat. People who have only seen 10 knots, get nervous and start whinning at 15-20 knots, and progressively freak out to the point of being useless as conditions build. Sailing in San Francisco's worst chop, in a J-24 is something you can scale up when you sail bigger boats on the ocean. Small boats make the sailor! Having situational awareness is another confidence booster. Experienced sailors recognize what the weather is doing--if it's veering or backing, building or not. If you know what is going on, then you will be calm and able to keep other people calm. Experiece is the difference between being "cool" or uncomfortable when things get really nasty. San Francisco can not be beat as the best venue to improve sailing skills because it has the best wind and the best sport sailing in the world. Bart Senior "Jonathan Ganz" wrote I don't know about the sails. I do know Neal wouldn't last 10 minutes. "Thom Stewart" wrote Hey Craz, I don't believe your Hong Kong Sails would last a season on SF Bay. It is a great, ruget sailing area. A place where sailor and equipment are put to the full test often. Ole Thom |
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