Yachtmaster
Offshore Certificate of Competence
Syllabus
- Yachtmaster Offshore Exam Syllabi (RYA MCA) - Candidates
may be given the opportunity to demonstrate knowledge or
competence in the areas listed below
In
each section the examiner will expect to see the candidate
take full responsibility for the management of the yacht and
crew. In RYA Yachtmaster Offshore exams the candidate will
be expected to demonstrate competence based on broad
experience.
All
candidates must be familiar with:
International
Regulations for preventing Collisions at Sea
Questions
will be confirmed to the International Regulations and
although Yachtmaster candidates must be aware of the
existence of Local Regulations they will not be expected to
memorise specific local regulations:
•
General rules (1-3)
• Steering and sailing rules (4-19)
• Lights and shapes (20-31)
• Sound and light signals (32-37)
• Signals for vessels fishing in close proximity (Annex II)
• Distress signals (Annex IV)
Safety
Yachtmaster
Candidates will be expected to know what safety equipment
should be carried on board a yacht, based either on the
recommendations in RYA booklet C8, the Special Regulations
of the ORC or the Codes of Practice for the Safety of Small
Commercial Vessels. In particular, candidates must know the
responsibilities of a skipper in relation to:
•
Safety harnesses
• Lifejackets
• Distress flares
• Fire prevention and fighting
• Liferafts
• Knowledge of rescue procedures. Helicopter rescue.
Boat Handling
Candidates for Yachtmaster Offshore
exam will be expected to answer questions or demonstrate
ability in more complex situations and will also be expected
to show a higher level of expertise:
•
Coming to and weighing anchor, under power or sail in
various conditions of wind and tide
• All berthing and unberthing situations in various
conditions of wind and tide
• Recovery of man overboard
• Towing, under open sea conditions and in confined areas
• Boat handling in confined areas under sail
• Boat handling in heavy weather Helmsmanship and sail
trim to sail to best advantage Use of warps for securing in
an alongside berth and for shifting berth or winding
General Seamanship
& Maintenance
•
Properties, use and care of synthetic fibre ropes
• Knots
• General deck-work, at sea and in harbour
• Engine operations and routine checks
• Improvisation of jury rigs following gear failure
Responsibilities of
Skipper
•
Can skipper a yacht and manage the crew
• Communication with crew
• Delegation of responsibility and watch-keeping
organisation
• Preparing yacht for sea and for adverse weather
• Tactics for heavy weather and restricted visibility
• Emergency and distress situations
• Victualling for a cruise and feeding at sea
• Customs procedures
• Standards of behaviour and courtesy
Navigation
•
Charts, navigational publications and sources of
navigational information
• Chartwork, including position fixing and shaping course
to allow for tidal stream and leeway
• Tide and tidal stream calculations
• Buoyage and visual aids to navigation
• Instruments, including compasses, logs, echo sounders,
radio navaids and chartwork instruments
• Passage planning and navigational tactics
• Pilotage techniques
• Navigational records
• Limits of navigational accuracy and margins of safety
• Lee shore dangers
• Use of electronic navigation aids for passage planning
and passage navigation
• Use of waypoints and electronic routeing
Meteorology
•
Definition of terms
• Sources of weather forecasts
• Weather systems and local weather effects
• Interpretation of weather forecasts, barometric trends
and visible phenomena
• Ability to make passage planning decisions based on
forecast information
Signals
•
Candidates for Yachtmaster Offshore exam must hold the Short
Range Certificate (SRC), Restricted (VHF only) Certificate
of Competence in radiotelephony or a higher grade of
certificate in radiotelephony.
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