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RYA Super Yacht PWC Recognised Training Centre
Is RYA PWC Instructor Training Improving
Guest Safety?
May 13th 2010 By Louisa
Beckett |

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Inexperienced guests who want to
play cowboy with the yachts stable of Jet Skis have long been a major
concern to deck crew. In 2007, the RYA (Royal Yachting Association) introduced
the PWC Instructor Course for superyachts.
The
course certifies yacht crew to give owners and guests the RYA Introduction to
PWC Safety Course and to issue them personal watercraft licenses, as required
by an increasing number of coastal authorities.
Typically, the RYA requires its courses be taught at its approved
training centers, but because most superyachts dont have the time to send
its crewmembers ashore for training, the association has qualified a number of
private instructors to bring the course directly to the boats.
Over the last twelve months, the
[training] has really taken off and a lot more enquiries have started to come
through. We offer a full bespoke service on board the
yacht
this way, they are working within the environment they know. Whilst
on board, we can then create all the necessary systems and operational
procedures, etc., for the yacht to become an RYA centre. A yacht must
have at least one certified RYA PWC Instructor amongst its crew in order to
become an official RYA PWC training center for owners and guests.
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The course typically takes four
days to complete. [Its] mainly on-water, but with some theory and
presentation skills run in a classroom environment (usually the crew mess or
unused decks), Eades said. The first part is the one-day RYA PWC
Competency Certificate
. The next three days are the RYA Instructor
Training Course. The time commitment comes as a surprise to many
crewmembers.
This is usually overcome when
they realize that the course is less about testing their own knowledge and PWC
skills [and] more about developing teaching skills and the techniques of group
control and safety, said Oceanpros Phil Godwin. Students tend
to find that the course is quite hard work but informative and enjoyable,
agreed Bluewaters Lizzie Irving.
Once the crewmember is qualified and able to issue
certificates, it enables the yacht to let their guests use the Jet Skis in
total freedom. Paul Glatzel of Powerboat Training UK commented,
[The training has been] well received. Initially there is often some
skepticism but once the crewmembers realize the yacht has invested in a really
valuable qualification for them, they really [get] into it.
The one-hour safety briefing and competency
training that the RYA requires its PWC Instructors give to yacht owners and
guests before letting them hop onto the yachts Jet Skis, Sea-Doos and
WaveRunners is not always met with a warm reception, however. Some
guests, who may have been using PWCs for many years, on charters have been
initially frustrated when told that they now have to complete the course,
Godwin said. If the instructor approaches it in the right way, however,
and uses the time to test their knowledge, it usually overcomes
this.
More typically though, the guests accept
the need to be licensed as they realize the potential dangers of
PWCs. It can be done in a fun environment, and it is
imperative, Irving said. The guests need to remember that the crew
do not make the rules and regulations.
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The key is that the captain
and management company must leave no room for doubt that undertaking the course
is essential and PWCs cannot be used on board unless the course is taken,
said Glatzel. The requirement should be referred to in the charter
contract and should be a part of the captains initial brief to
guests. Most boats like the fact they now have a reason that the
guests must listen to a safety briefing [as well as] the fact that they are
trained instructors on equipment which in the past has been taught through
experience rather than a scheme, Eades said.
These training firms agree that when it comes to PWC operations, the
RYA course has enhanced owner and guest safety aboard RYA-certified
superyachts. Many yachts already provided some of the safety framework
that the RYA requires of a Superyacht Recognised Training Centre
. [But]
recognition as an RYA training centre ensures that these procedures are
documented and formalized
, said Godwin. What the scheme has
also done is defined a syllabus with specific teaching points [for] what a PWC
user must know before taking to the water.
The yacht is required to have a regime of supervision with
defined areas of operation and safety boats with a trained crew member
supervising at all times, said Irving. This can only be beneficial
to guest safety. The [most important part of] all of this is that
for the first time, education and thought are going into the small crafts of
yachts, Eades said. We believe that in the future, training on
board superyachts in all small craft (powered and sail) will become the
norm.
RYA PWC Instructor Training also can
benefit crewmembers professionally. The scheme helps to show that the
crew have fulfilled their duty of care to their guests in training them to a
standard that is recognized by an independent body. In that way, it should help
to protect any crew member should an incident occur, Godwin said.
Its a wise choice for any yacht that operates PWCs.
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