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Dinghy disasters
Practical Boat Owner
|Summer 2022
A former inspector with the Marine Accident Investigation Branch, Owen Brown reflects on sailing adventures that taught him safety lessons

For as long as I can remember, I have wanted to sail. When I was five years old my father bought me a Star pond yacht. It captured my imagination. I sailed it on a flooded gravel pit until the sails were worn out. It was put on a shelf in the garage and forgotten about for many years until I re-discovered it at the age of 10 or 11 during one long school summer holiday. It was in a poor state, but my mother made a new set of sails. I painted it, re-rigged it then took it down to Milford beach at Milford Haven for a test sail.
I launched it from the Hot Water slip tied to the end of a fishing line. It sailed beautifully, bobbing over the rippling water as it headed out into the Haven. To my surprise, it didn't stop when it came to the end of the fishing line. My knot had come undone. When I realised it was sailing free, I ran up to the Rath where there was a public telescope. I was able to follow the yacht's progress until I ran out of sixpences for the telescope, by which time it was well out towards the middle of the Haven.
Naturally, I was disappointed at the loss of the model yacht we'd spent hours restoring, but that feeling was surpassed by the excitement of imagining the adventure on which the little yacht had embarked.
Sailing aspirations
In 1965 at the age of 11, I joined the 3rd Milford Haven Sea Scouts. The troop had a number of canvas canoes and several old, wooden ship lifeboats moored off Milford beach. We also had a naval whaler fully equipped for sailing, which I was never lucky enough to crew in. I can remember one glowering Friday evening watching wistfully from the Scout Hut window as the whaler, heeled to its gunwale, careered through the waves off Milford beach in a stiff south-westerly wind; I could almost feel the cold salt spray on my face. I had to have a boat.
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