Yachting
is
a
noncommercial
boating
activity.
It
may
be
racing
sailing
boats,
cruising
to
distant
ports,
or
just
day
sailing
around
a
bay.
Whilst
sailing's
invention
is
prehistoric,
racing
sailing
boats
is
believed
to
have
started
in
The
Netherlands
some
time
in
the
17th
century,
whence
it
soon
made
its
way
to
England
where
custom-built
racing
"yachts"
began
to
emerge.
In
1851,
a
challenge
to
an
American
yacht
racing
club
in
New
York
led
to
the
beginning
of
the
America's
Cup,
a
regatta
won
by
the
New
York
Yacht
Club
until
1983,
when
they
finally
lost
to
Australia
II.
Meanwhile,
yacht
racing
continued
to
evolve,
with
the
development
of
recognised
classes
of
racing
yachts,
from
small
dinghies
up
to
huge
maxi
yachts.
These
days,
yacht
racing
is
a
common
participant
sport
around
the
developed
world,
particularly
where
favourable
wind
conditions
and
access
to
reasonably-sized
bodies
of
water
are
available
-
most
yachting
is
conducted
in
salt
water,
but
smaller
craft
can
be
and
are
raced
on
lakes
and
even
larger
rivers.
Whilst
there
are
many
different
types
of
racing
vessels,
they
can
generally
be
separated
into
the
larger
yachts,
which
are
larger
and
contain
facilities
for
extended
voyages,
and
smaller
harbour
racing
craft
such
as
dinghies
and
skiffs.
Dinghy
races
are
conducted
on
sheltered
water
on
smaller
craft,
usually
designed
for
crews
of
between
one
and
three
people.
They
are
almost
all
equipped
with
one
mast.
Some
have
only
one
triangular
sail,
but
most
have
two
configured
as
a
sloop,
and
usually
carry
a
spinnaker,
a
large,
bulging
sail
designed
for
sailing
"with
the
wind".
Most
races
are
conducted
between
vessels
of
identical
design
("one
design"
racing).
In
these
races,
with
identical
equipment
the
sailors
best
able
to
make
use
of
the
ambient
conditions
win.
Dinghy
designs
vary
from
small,
stable,
and
slow
craft
for
novice
sailors
to
lightweight,
high-speed
designs
that
are
very
difficult
for
even
experienced
crews
to
sail
safely
and
effectively.
Australia's
18-foot
skiff
class
are
the
fastest
monohull
dinghies,
reaching
speeds
of
up
to
40
kilometres
per
hour
even
in
relatively
light
winds.
Sailing
has
a
reputation
for
being
a
boring
spectator
sport,
but
skiff
racing
can
be
very
exciting,
particularly
in
unpredictable
conditions
where
crews
struggle
to
keep
their
boats
upright.
Various
multi-hull
racing
classes
are
even
faster.
Various
one-design
dinghy
classes
are
raced
at
the
Summer
Olympic
Games.
Larger
yachts
are
also
raced
on
harbours,
but
the
most
prestigious
yacht
races
are
point-to-point
long
distance
races
on
the
open
ocean.
Bad
weather
makes
such
races
a
considerable
test
of
equipment
and
willpower
just
to
finish,
and
from
time
to
time
boats
and
sailors
are
lost
sea.
The
longest
such
events
are
"round-the-world"
races
which
can
take
months
to
complete,
but
better-known
are
events
such
as
the
"Fastnet
race"
the
United
Kingdom
and
the
Sydney
to
Hobart
yacht
race
along
the
east
coast
of
Australia.
As
well
as
a
first-past-the-post
trophy
(called
"line
honours"),
boats
race
under
a
handicap
system
that
adjusts
finishing
times
for
the
relative
speeds
of
the
boats'
design,
theoretically
offering
each
entrant
an
equal
chance.
Cruising is traveling on a boat. It could be a trip to the other
side of the bay or across the ocean to the islands of the South
Pacific. Safe cruising across long distances requires a degree of
self sufficiency and a wide range of skills beyond handling the
boat. Knowledge of map reading and navigation, meteorology, mechanics,
electrical systems, and more can be helpful or even life saving
when cruising to distant ports.