Sailing Camp Abroad and Clinics

Training camps and clinics are the most intensive building block in regatta preparation. While regular club training often only covers a few hours per week, camps bundle several days or weeks of concentrated training in one location – with like-minded sailors, professional coaching and optimal conditions. Whether a winter camp in southern France, a class camp before the European Championship or a club weekend on the home lake: those who strategically embed training camps in their season planning gain technical confidence, tactical understanding and team spirit in one step.

What training camps and clinics mean

In regatta sailing, training camps usually refer to multi-day or multi-week stays that specifically serve competition preparation. Clinics can be shorter – often weekend or holiday formats for youth and beginners – but follow the same principle: focused training away from everyday life, with a fixed daily rhythm and clear learning objectives.

The difference from normal training lies in intensity and structure. A camp combines on-water training, video analysis, rules discussions, fitness and mental preparation into one cohesive program. Top athletes use several camps per season; ambitious amateurs already benefit from one or two targeted blocks per year.

Typical camp formats in regatta sailing

  1. Winter camp – Land and on-water training in warmer regions during the off-season
  2. Preparation camp – Targeted unit 2–4 weeks before a championship
  3. Class camp – Organised by class associations, often with top coaches and practice regattas
  4. Club camp – In-house at the club, affordable access for broader youth squads
  5. National squad camp – Run by the federation or national training centre, focus on elite athletes
  6. Match race or team racing camp – Specialisation in one discipline

Camp types by target group

Youth / Juniors

Optimist camp, ILCA camp, holiday camps with a playful structure

Elite sport / Olympics

National squad camp, world championship preparation, international winter camps

Amateur / Club

Club weekend, class camp, preparation camp before regional regattas

For keelboats and crew boats, the formats are supplemented by specialised camps such as keelboat crew camp or team racing camp – each tailored to the respective target group and boat class.

Why training camps make the difference

Regatta sailing requires repetition under realistic conditions. A single training session per week is rarely enough to internalise manoeuvres under pressure or consolidate complex tactical patterns. Camps create the necessary training density: four to six hours on the water daily, supplemented by debriefings and land program.

Furthermore, camps promote exchange with other sailors. You sail against stronger opponents, observe their trim and handling, discuss rules decisions and build a network – especially valuable before international events. For crew boats, time together on land is at least as important as hours on the water: communication, role allocation and trust often grow faster at camp than in a scattered season routine.

Tip: A well-planned camp is worthwhile even for amateurs: two intensive weekend blocks in spring often replace weeks of unstructured leisure sailing – provided goals and daily schedule are defined in advance.

Planning: timing, duration and goals

Integrating camps into the season follows periodisation in the sailing season. In the foundation phase, winter camps serve technical development and fitness. In the competition phase, regatta simulation and fine-tuning take priority. Directly before championships: shorter, more focused, with reduced load – analogous to the tapering concept from training fundamentals.

Camp type
Ideal period
Typical duration
Main goal
Winter camp
November – March
5–14 days
Technique, fitness, rules knowledge
Spring camp
March – May
3–7 days
Form building, tactics, practice regattas
Championship camp
2–3 weeks before event
3–5 days
Fine-tuning, course briefing, mental preparation
Youth holiday camp
Easter / summer holidays
5–10 days
Playful development, class transition
Club weekend
Year-round
2–3 days
Team cohesion, basic technique

SMART goals for every camp

Vague resolutions like "sail better" are not enough. Formulate concrete goals for each camp:

  1. Technique: e.g. "Roll tack under 8 seconds in 15 knots of wind"
  2. Tactics: e.g. "Start position at the favoured end in 70% of training starts"
  3. Rules: e.g. "Correctly assess Rule 18 situations without protest"
  4. Fitness: e.g. "45 minutes of continuous hiking without loss of quality"
  5. Mental: e.g. "After mistakes, sail focused again within one minute"

The balance between technique and tactics training should be explicitly defined in the camp plan – typically 60% technique in the preparation phase, 60% tactics shortly before regattas.

Daily schedule at a professional training camp

A structured daily rhythm maximises learning success and prevents overload. Top camps follow a proven pattern:

Morning (on the water):

  • 08:00 Briefing: weather, goals, course setup
  • 08:30–12:30 On-water training (technique blocks, two-boat drills, starts)
  • 12:30 Lunch and short recovery

Afternoon (on the water or on land):

  • 14:00–17:00 Second on-water session or regatta simulation
  • 17:30 Video debriefing and coach feedback
  • 19:00 Dinner

Evening (on land):

Typical camp day at a glance

07:00
Breakfast – Energy for the day
08:00
Briefing – Weather, goals, course setup
08:30
On-water block 1 – Technique, two-boat drills, starts
12:30
Lunch break – Lunch and recovery
14:00
On-water block 2 – Regatta simulation or second session
17:30
Video analysis – Debriefing and coach feedback
19:00
Dinner – Team time and recovery
20:00
Theory / mental – Rules quiz, tactics, mental training
22:00
Sleep – Recovery for the next day

Training methods on the water

Camps use methods that are rarely possible in everyday club training:

  • Two-boat training – Direct comparison with training partner, coach radio commentary
  • Fleet simulation – Multiple boats start together, realistic regatta situations
  • Drills – Repeated practice of individual manoeuvres (tacks, mark roundings, spinnaker set)
  • Coach boat accompaniment – Live feedback on trim, course and crew work
  • Practice regatta – Camp conclusion with scoring and full procedure

Logistics, budget and organisation

Training camps require planning beyond the water. Those who book early save costs and secure places in sought-after venues.

Cost factor
Beginner / youth
Ambitious amateur
Elite sport
Camp fee (coaching, organisation)
200–600 € / week
500–1,500 € / week
Federation subsidized or 2,000+ €
Accommodation and meals
150–400 € / week
300–800 € / week
600–1,200 € / week
Travel and boat transport
100–300 €
300–800 €
1,000+ € (international)
Equipment and repairs
50–150 €
150–500 €
500+ €

Pre-departure checklist

  • Camp goals defined in writing and discussed with coach
  • Boat fully serviced, rigging checked, spare parts packed
  • Sail and rig combination selected for expected wind conditions
  • Weather and venue information studied (tides, local effects)
  • Wetsuit, life jacket, medication, sun protection, water bottle
  • Rules and class rules as PDF or book on hand
  • Training and competition licence valid
  • Insurance (liability, travel, accident insurance) checked
  • Emergency contacts and team communication (WhatsApp group, radio channels)
  • Nutrition plan prepared for intensive days

Warning: Overtraining at camps is a common trap: four full on-water days in a row without recovery leads to declining manoeuvre quality and increased injury risk. Plan at least half a recovery day per week.

Choosing training venues and conditions

The choice of venue determines which skills can be trained. Light-wind lakes are suitable for fine trim and patience; coastal waters with tides and gusts prepare for international championships; thermal lakes (e.g. in the Mediterranean) train shift reading and tactical flexibility.

Popular regions for European training camps:

  1. Mediterranean – Hyères, Palma, Cagliari: reliable wind, international fleets
  2. Atlantic / Biscay – Tough conditions, ideal for heavy-wind training
  3. Germany / Central Europe – Lake Constance, Baltic Sea: affordable travel, class camps
  4. Caribbean / USA – Winter camps for Olympic squads, consistent conditions

Venue choice by training goal

Venue type
Wind type
Difficulty
Cost
Ideal boat type
Light-wind lake
Consistently light, few gusts
Low
Affordable
Optimist, ILCA, fine-trim classes
Coastal waters
Tides, gusts, changing current
High
Medium to high
470, 49er, keelboats
Thermal venue
Thermal shifts, changing strength
Medium
Medium
All classes, tactics focus

Youth camps vs. adult and squad camps

Youth need age-appropriate supervision, clear structure and sufficient free time. Successful youth camps mix sailing with games, rules workshops and social activities – overload puts people off in the long term.

Adult and squad camps focus on higher intensity, video analysis and data-driven feedback. Here every detail counts: GPS tracks, polars, wind data and systematic debriefings. Focus under regatta pressure is specifically trained at such camps – through simulated decision situations and pressure training under time constraints.

Success factors for crew boats

For keelboats and larger dinghies with crew, the camp is a team event:

  • Shared accommodation strengthens cohesion
  • Roles and commands are tested under stress
  • Substitute crew and rotation practice for long regattas
  • Tactician and helmsman train communication routines

Camp preparation through follow-up

1
Goal definition – Set SMART goals and camp priorities
2
Choose venue / coach – Conditions and expertise matching the season phase
3
Logistics – Plan travel, accommodation, boat transport, budget
4
Camp execution – Structured daily schedule with on-water and land program
5
Video / data evaluation – Document and discuss findings
6
Integration into season training – Repeat camp content at home venue

Follow-up: transferring camp insights into the season

A camp does not end with departure. Without follow-up, many insights fade within a few weeks. Document daily:

  1. What improved technically (specific manoeuvres, trim settings)
  2. Which tactical patterns worked
  3. Open points for the next training session
  4. Video material with timestamps and coach comments

In the weeks after the camp, the camp priorities should be repeated at the home venue – in shorter, focused sessions. This keeps the camp investment effective long-term and flows into the next regatta.

Important: The best regatta sailors do not treat camps as holidays with sailing, but as concentrated learning phases with measurable results. Quality beats quantity: a well-planned 5-day camp brings more than three unstructured weeks.

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