Why does our sailing skill suffer as we get older ? I know there are a few notable exceptions, but most people who are still sailing whilst qualifying for the buss pass also find themselves slipping back somewhat from whatever typical placing they had, and it is galling to find much less experienced but younger crews getting ahead. I could understand it in tough conditions where athletic skill counts, but one would have thought that in light/moderate conditions where acquired skills like downwind over waves, spotting shifts, tactics where other boats are involved etc. are needed, the cunning & experience that comes with age would be an advantage practically up until the time when we go gaga. |
Yes, you are right. It's related to memory and recall. As we get older, the recall mechanism in our brains gets more difficult to access in a rapid manner, neuroligcal pathways get blocked so the brain has to compensate by looking for other routes. This recall effects decision making skills from the late 20's onwards, however you wouldn't notice it at first. Decision making skills such as wave technique can be delayed by split seconds, which will, over time, coupled with staring position, mark rounding, tactical decisions, will see you slip back through the fleet. |
Well, the answer is that the older you get the more you lose your facilities and that starts at a scarily young age, younger in some than in others. |
My brain turned to mush when I had kids. Can hardly string a sentence together some days. It's better nowadays when I get a sensible amount of sleep, but I'm sure there's been a permanent change. |
Mags what tosh, you're brain is as sharp as any, brain excercise? Get that boat of yours sailing again, do the Telegraph Cross word or the Times Jumbo on Saturdays. There are lots of people, direct contemporaries of mine, - to a great deal older than me still sailing dinghies, though I have a keel under me, but the other day I was late for a flight and went straight to the gate following two young men who needed haircuts (It was a BA Flight.) I followed them on to the plane we all turned left I found my seats and settled in to wait for the plane to be boarded, they went straight on and onto the flight deck, God they hadn't started shaving yet! It is I suppose a sign of age (Though I haven't noticed Policemen or Doctors looking young.) but by goodness they did they didn't look teenage, though clearly they were. We do not seem to forget things we learned young, walking, talking, riding a bike, swimming and if we were young enough sailing, tying knots etc., it seems to be the things I picked up later like Scottish Country Dancing, playing bridge etc., that I forget! |
Round 2,940,999? to the nearest thousdanth`s? And then to the nearest prime number? |
PS Maths homework???????????????? |
Testing at 70? Didn't happen to me though I had to complete a form and I'll have to do it again next year. |
Starting to helm at 53 in a Merlin means that I am still on the learning curve and every year I am a little faster. It's when learning and physical incapacity meet coming in the opposite direction that I will peak (soon I fear) and then decline (rapidly I also fear)!!! |
I should have added - sail a really old boat like Gannet then you can blame the lack of speed on the boat. I would love for someone who knows what they are up to to have a race in her. She is a one string wonder (there is a jib tensioner aka Highfield lever) and nothing else really much to adjust. |
Try Valium. Then if you you dont win, who cares. |
I never did win, don't care, and have zero plans to stop sailing. I just wondered why, never having been much good, I now seem to be getting worse. We are competing mostly in OK Dinghies, so it might also have something to do with the fact that I'm still sailing BEL-1 with wooden rig whilst more & more people are sporting black masts |
But Rod - are they sailing with black masts AND red bank acounts? |
This thread is taking a very depressing turn for us older ones. At 72 years, I seem to be going quicker. I put it down to: fit skilled crew, better boat, more time for maintenance, time to improve skills by reading and doing opens etc. I keep my brain active by doing puzzles in the Telegraph, and learning Russian. So don't give up, there is still time to win that club trophy! |
At what age can you start claiming to have senior moments. |
An older Merlin-Rocket sailor goes into a ice cream parlour and asks for a vanilla ice-cream as he levers himself painfully onto a bar stool the girls says "Crushed nuts"? "No" he says "Arthritis"! |
I can't remember when I had my first senior moment! |
Mine was the first time I couldn't recall my childrens' names when they were about...., sorry it's gone! |
Although all sorts of things do decline with age, I thought that the brain was still making new connections even with a declining number of neurones with ageing. There are some situations where there is no substitute for experience, but looking around it would seem that even dinghy sailors are past their best after 50. It's not the case with musicians except vocalists, nor writers or philosophers so you can't argue that mental decline is an inevitable part of ageing. Balance and agility definitely decline though and may well account for the loss of performance. |
Good to note that your eye sight has not diminished then, |
I have a new theory! |
But can they tie a bowline,do an wire-rope splice, mend and rig their own boats? |
Good point Andrew, the % difference between me and guys I wanted to beat is very small. I think loss of concentration is a lot of it, and recognition that it doesn't really matter anyway. |
I haven't found that the bar has got higher - it's just the price of the stuff they sell has gone up!! |
What a nice thread!, and thankyou all for your wise & constructive comments. However, from our splendid isolation here in Sarkosyland I have noticed that Merlins younger than ours(1620 & 2988) have what appears to be a Zimmer frame in the centre of the boat; can it be that the class is specifically looking to attract older sailors? |
Yep, the class is trying to attract the older folk. |
I have a slightly different theory. I heard on the radio today that 'genius' is 1% inspiration 99% perspiration, and that it take 10,000 hours of practice to become a 'genius'. |
Or as Arnold Palmer put it or was it Jack Nicklause - a golfer anyway -the more I practice the luckier I get or when a young violinist said to Yehudi Menuin after a performance "I would give my life tp play like that Mr Menuin" the great man replied "I did". |
Mags asks 'what about these new brain trainer games'. Brain Book |
I have wondered what it is that golfers take up when they retire. |
Sames as every one else. Crown Green Bowling |
I thought they only lost their balls. |