Book description
Interested in learning to sail but feel like you're navigating in murky
waters?
Sailing for Dummies, Second Edition
introduces the basics of sailing, looks at the different types of
sailboats and their basic parts, and teaches you everything you need to
know before you leave the dock.
In Sailing for Dummies, Second
Edition, two U. S. sailing champions show you how to:
- Find and choose a sailing school
- Use life jackets correctly
- Tie ten nautical knots
- Handle sailing emergencies (such as capsizing and rescuing a man overboard)
- Launch your boat from a trailer, ramp, or beach
- Get your boat from point A to point B (and back again)
- Predict and respond to water and wind conditions
- Read charts, plot your course, use a compass, and find your
position at sea
Sailing for Dummies shows you that getting out on the water is
easier than you think. The authors keep the sailor-speak to a minimum
where possible, but give you a grasp of the terminology you need to
safely and effectively communicate with your crew. A textbook, user's
manual, and reference all in one, this book takes the intimidation out
of sailing and gives you the skills and confidence you need to get
your feet wet and become the sailing pro you've always wanted to be.
Anchors away!
JJ and Peter Isler have been sailing for most of
their lives. JJ grew up around boats in San Diego, California,
learning to sail in a little 7-foot dinghy called a Sabot. Peter
started out loving powerboats and fishing (boys can be so strange!),
but took up sailing after his family moved to Connecticut when he was
13 years old.
The Islers are well known throughout the world of
sailing as top competitors and teachers. They both have taught sailing
to people of all ages and experiences. Peter played an important,
early role in developing US Sailing's educational program. He also
coached at the Olympic level and helped found the American Sailing
Association, which accredits sailing schools and certifies sailors and
instructors.
Peter has twice won the America's Cup, serving as
navigator aboard Stars & Stripes with Dennis Conner in 1987
and 1988. An accomplished small-boat sailor, Peter was Intercollegiate
Sailor of the Year while at Yale University. He was the top-ranked U.
S. sailor on the professional match-racing circuit for five years and
has won many of the world's major ocean races, including the Bermuda
Race and the Transpac (where he navigated Morning Glory to an
elapsed time record in 2005).
Peter has also been very active in
the media. In the 1990s, he shifted his America's Cup energies to
television, where he was a featured analyst in ESPN's Emmy
Award-winning Cup coverage in 1992 and 1995. More recently, he covered
sailing for the Outdoor Life Network (OLN), including its coverage of
the 2003 America's Cup. He is the author of several books on the sport
and is presently Editor at Large of Sailing World magazine. In
his spare time, Peter enjoys playing guitar and keyboard with his
band, The Water Brothers.
JJ is the only American female (so far)
to have won two Olympic medals in sailing, and she is the first female
inductee in the Sailing World Hall of Fame. With crew member
Pamela Healy, JJ won the Bronze Medal in the Women's 470 class in the
1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Spain. In the 2000 Olympics in Sydney,
Australia, she and crew member Pease Glaser won the Silver. JJ is a
four-time Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year (in 1986, 1991, 1997, and
2000) and has won three World Championships and numerous national
titles. She was the first female to compete in a number of events on
the international matchracing circuit. And in 1995 she was the
tactician and starting helmsman for the America3 Women's
America's Cup team. She graduated from Yale University where she was
captain of the sailing team and a collegiate All-American.