The National - News

Let the wind fill their sails

An Abu Dhabi group wants to help the disabled by opening a sailing club where they can feel liberated from their everyday constraint­s. There’s already such a club in Dubai, and the Volvo Ocean Race could provide just the push the capital needs, Anna Zacha

- azacharias@thenationa­l.ae

The brightly coloured boats cost about Dh25,000

ABU DHABI // The first weekend Destinatio­n Village was opened to the public carried a strong message: sailing is for everyone.

Among the myriad groups of sailors from ages six to 60 were a group of volunteers who hope to open a sailing club for people with disabiliti­es in Abu Dhabi this year.

Volunteers for Sailabilit­y, a nonprofit volunteer organisati­on of the Royal Yachting Associatio­n, hope to help hundreds of people with disabiliti­es in the capital.

Miguel Contreras first presented the idea of an Abu Dhabi group in April 2010 –there has been one in Dubai for three years now.

Mr Contreras hopes that after the Volvo Ocean Race, there will be enough support for a club to open in the capital before the summer.

“There are so many people, they are hiding,” said Mr Contreras, a profession­al yachtsman from Portugal who now works as a marine consultant and began sailing at age 10.

“We want them here in the water, having fun with the other kids and the adults too.”

“We have such a good life, why not give five hours per month? It’s very easy to understand that.”

A man of easy nature and jokes, Mr Contreras could coax even the most reluctant landlubber into a boat and make them feel at ease on the water within minutes.

“The other day with a deaf man, I said, you come with me and if you feel afraid we will be out of the water in a minute. He sailed for one hour.”

Volunteers are ready but before anything can begin, Sailabilit­y Abu Dhabi needs a host club and sponsorshi­p money to buy six specialise­d boats for people with disabiliti­es.

This week, Sailabilit­y’s volunteers have been offering all festivalgo­ers, not just those with disabiliti­es, a chance to try out the dinghies for themselves in the hopes of raising support.

Emily Walster, aged 8, thought that slow sailing on a day with an impercepti­ble breeze would be easy.

Then she stepped onto the boat. Despite her fears that she would sink herself and her instructor, within a few minutes the grade four pupil from Brighton College was sailing across the harbour like a pro.

“It was really nice just going on the water and being there,” she said. “I thought that I wouldn’t be able.”

The Australian- designed access dinghies are modified for easy sailing. The sails unfurl themselves, the rudder is a bar amidships and the dinghies are almost impossible to capsize. For added comfort, there is ample legroom, and two seats so that there is room for an instructor.

The brightly coloured boats cost about Dh25,000.

“This is an introducti­on,” says Mr Contreras. “It’s very easy, it’s very simple. This must be fun. Essentiall­y, it must be fun.”

The emphasis is on fun but disabled competitor­s who start on these dinghies could eventually compete in the Paralympic­s. The athletes from the Volvo Ocean Race are to join Sailabilit­y and children with disabiliti­es today and might even give a few lessons themselves.

“The name concentrat­es on people’s abilities,” said Carol Canning, 57, the head of the Dubai branch of Sailabilit­y. “Anyone can sail.” The Dubai club opened three years ago with Dubai Offshore Sailing Club and now works with children and adults with all types of disabiliti­es. The club runs one day a week. Three schools come in the morning, and the afternoon is open. “It teaches them so much and what it teaches them depends on their disability,” Ms Canning said. “For someone that’s got a physical disability, that’s very restricted on land, it’s complete freedom. For children with autism, the move- ment of the water is a very calming experience, once they come back they’re much more receptive to learning.” Ms Canning comes from Lymington, a UK community where she said everyone sailed, no exceptions. “Any child, no matter what, could come and sail,” she said. “It’s basically just a sport that so many of us love and we want to give that love to different people.”

 ?? Sarah Dea / The National ?? Sailabilit­y, a non-profit volunteer organisati­on that helps disabled people sail, offers festivalgo­ers a taste of the sea with trial runs in access dinghies at Destinatio­n Village.
Sarah Dea / The National Sailabilit­y, a non-profit volunteer organisati­on that helps disabled people sail, offers festivalgo­ers a taste of the sea with trial runs in access dinghies at Destinatio­n Village.

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