Eemspoort,
You may well be right in what you say. (I haven't finished my flying lessons yet... ) so maybe I find flying simple because I have experience.
Since Groeenegaard has explained the physics of manouvering- from a 'real world' perspective, it all makes total sense. However, flying a airplane is still very easy. Admittedly, I am talking about a single engined Slingsby Firefly and not an A380!
Put this way- 50 hours and you can be qualified with a pilots licence (single engined, VFR only/ non instrument). I think it takes more than 50 hours to qualify as a ship captain...
Stu
Yep, your right!
I don't know what the qualifications are for see-going captains, but for inland vessels you need a minimum of (i thought) 4 years of "sailing-time". This means, 4 times 180 days in your "Dienstboekje". That is a personal log for entering your sail-days. However, this has nothing to do with actually sailing/pilotting a vessel!
Offcourse you need to go to school for getting your "schippers-diploma" (inland-captain-diploma?). If you have this diploma, and the apropriate sail-time, you can pick up your "Groot-Vaarbewijs" (drivers-license for inland-ships).
So, you don't need any practical exames what so ever! Strange, huh... I've meated people how had there "drivers-license", and wanted to get there Radar-diploma, and didn't know what to do with the radar-simulator! They couldn't pilot a vessel!!! So the teacher (how teached me on school, so i knew the guy
) asked me if i could give those fellas a speed-cousre in piloting a vessel! That was a great laugh, offcourse, however i don't like to meat them on the waters in the fog...
Allthough, they did get there Radar-diplomas, so i must have done something good there.
I myself took the long road. I have been to school for a total of 7 years, this was all related to inland-shipping.
Because of this, i had several points i didn't had to graduate on for my Skipper-diploma and "drivers-license".
But i had more advantages counting for me, because i was born and raised on inland-ships.
Now i have all my papers, accept for one. I don't have the "Rijn-patent" (drivers-license for sailing the Rhine), so i cant sail the Rhine without a Pilot. This is a highly questionable peice of paper, since there are much more difficult rivers to sail. Oh well, that's not interesting for this thread.
But! If you only want to sail a ship smaller then 20 meters, and/or slower then 13 km/h, you need the "Klein-Vaarbweijs" (drivers-license for Small Ships). This is a peice of paper, easy to get for most people.
So it's kinda like flying planes. If you only want to fly a Cessna, for instance, you are on the right way with your lessons.
But if you whant to fly the A380, that's a totally different kind of cake! You'll need more and other lessons to take, before you have the apropriate papers and qualifications to fly that kind of giants.
Hope this answers some questions.