Training

SFPS offers classes, workshops and certification in various aspects of Boating safety for both sailboats and powerboats.

Courses Available

Advanced Courses

Five Sequential Courses in Seamanship and Navigation

  • Seamanship
  • Piloting
  • Advanced Piloting
  • Junior Navigation
  • Navigation

Elective Courses

Six non-sequential courses in marine-oriented topics

  • Cruise Planning
  • Engine Maintenance
  • Marine Electronics
  • Instructor Development
  • Sail
  • Weather

Self-Study Guides

These are a collection of short self-study guides on special subjects and are available to non-members

Program Non-Member’s Cost
Boat Insurance $ 9.00
Compass Adjusting 9.00
GMDSS and Marine Radio 20.00
GPS 10.00
How to Fly Flags 9.00
Introduction to Sailing 20.00
Intro to Navigational Astronomy 9.00
Knots, Bends & Hitches 15.00
Marine Amateur Radio 15.00
Plotting & Labeling Standard 9.00
RADAR 9.00
Sight Reduction Methods 20.00
Skipper Saver 10.00
Nautical Terms 9.00
Water Sports 9.00

Elective Courses

No prerequisite is required for any elective courses

Cruise Planning

  • Planning a cruise, whether a day or many months long
  • Planning the voyage
  • The boat and how it is equipped
  • Crew Selection
  • Provisioning
  • Navigation planning
  • Weather
  • Communications
  • Entering and clearing foreign ports
  • Anchors and anchoring
  • Voyage management
  • Emergencies afloat
  • Medical emergencies
  • Security

Engine Maintenance

  • General construction of engines
  • Operating principles of engines
  • Maintenance and repair of marine engines
  • Cooling, electrical, fuel, and lubricating systems
  • Engine trouble diagnosis and temporary remedies
  • Safety measures

Marine Electronics

  • Your boat’s electrical and electronic systems
  • Wiring
  • Grounding
  • Electrolysis control
  • Batteries and their maintenance
  • Depth finders
  • Marine radio telephones
  • Radar
  • GPS
  • Loran
  • Omega
  • FCC requirements for station operator licensing

Instructor Development

  • Effective communications for speakers and teachers.
  • Practical skills for preparing for meetings and teaching.
  • Preparing outlines for presentations Practice in presentations.
  • Use of audio-visual and other aids.

Sail

  • Terminology of sailing
  • Types of hulls
  • Rigs and sail plans
  • Running and standing rigging
  • Adjustment gear for rigging
  • Hull and water forces caused by wind and waves
  • Forces versus balance
  • Points of sail
  • Sail handling
  • Sailing under all different wind conditions
  • Tuning the sailboat
  • Sailboat instrumentation
  • Boat operation
  • Sailboat marlinespike techniques
  • Emergency techniques unique to sailboats

Weather

  • Awareness of weather phenomena
  • How to read the weather map and sky
  • Understanding and anticipating weather development
  • Characteristics and structure of the atmosphere
  • What weather is and its basic causes
  • Normal development and movement of weather systems
  • Factors that enter into weather forecasting
  • Instrumental and visual observations made afloat
  • Cloud sequences and the weather they predict
  • Air masses
  • Fronts
  • Storms
  • Fog
  • Taking Observations and making predictions

Advanced Grades

Seamanship

  • Marlinspike
  • Hull design and performance
  • Boat handling under normal conditions
  • Emergencies
  • Marine Environment
  • Living aboard a boat
  • How to care for a boat
  • Nautical etiquette and customs

Piloting

  • Finding your way
  • Charts and publications
  • Aids to navigation
  • The Mariner’s compass
  • Determining deviation
  • Bearings
  • Piloting and labeling
  • The art of positioning
  • Weekend cruise

Advanced Piloting

Suggested prerequisites: Seamanship, Piloting

  • Review of basic piloting
  • Electronic coastal n avigation
  • Advanced positioning techniques
  • Positioning with current effects
  • Tides and tidal currents
  • Predicting height of tide and tidal currents
  • Practice cruise

Junior Navigation

Suggested prerequisite: Advanced Piloting

  • Principles of celestial navigation
  • Methods of finding positions at sea
  • Electronic navigation principles
  • Identification of stars and planets
  • Use of the sextant
  • The Nautical Almanac
  • Offshore charts and the Sailings

Navigation

Suggested prerequisite: Junior Navigation

  • Techniques of celestial navigation
  • Fundamental principles of celestial navigation
  • Extensive work with chronometers
  • Extensive work with sextants
  • The equator system of coordinates
  • The horizon system of coordinates
  • The navigator’s day’s work at sea

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The SF Sail & Power Squadron is a unit of the United States Power Squadrons (USPS)

Training