San Carlos Mexico Sail
San Carlos Sailing School BEWARE BEWARE BEWARE Mexico If you are
considering spending thousands of dollars on sailing lessons;
look at the other school in San Carlos. If you choose the San
Carlos Sailing School, you will not be treated to sailing
lessons but rather to intense personal degradation and be placed
in an extremely hostile environment. The instructor has little
interest in teaching sailing skills and a good deal of interest
in developing your supposedly woefully inadequate personal
character. My wife and I ( who are in our mid-fifties) chose San
Carlos Sailing Adventures and got Mr. Baraff as an instructor.
In light of our experience, we strongly recommend that you do
not use Mr. Baraff and his San Carlos Sailing School . We had an
awful experience and we cannot believe we actually had to pay
this guy big money to do little more than abuse us both
physically and mentally. It is our belief that Mr. Baraff has
little, if any experience teaching adults to sail. We feel you
should know a few things about Mr. Baraff. First, he informed us
that he is by training, a National Outdoor Leadership
instructor. A sort of Outward Bound program with attitude. He is
used to instructing college kids not adults in their forties or
fifties. Sailing instruction is not his primary focus. He is
interested in physically and emotionally challenging individuals
in order to develop character. Sailing is incidental to Mr.
Baraff and it is a secondary benefit if anyone actually picks up
sailing skills from him. Mr. Baraff seemed determined to find
the most adverse sailing conditions available to him and his
lessons." Mr. Baraff refused to allow us to learn sailing skills
under fair weather conditions on the last two days of our
lessons. He insisted on having us take written exams both
mornings when the winds were light and then going out in the
afternoons under intermediate conditions. I might mention we
were the ONLY sailboat out both days. On the last morning, even
though, we asked him to go out early and take the written test
in the afternoon, he again refused to go out saying he had some
errands to run. He wanted us to demonstrate "Man-Over-Board"
skills and we would have happily done that in the A.M. but he
wanted it done when it was blowing 25 knots. As we mentioned,
Mr. Baraff was both physically and emotionally abusive towards
us. He made fun of my wife Joanne for wanting to use a winch
when trimming sails and insisted she pull sheets with her hands.
In addition, there was a moment when he forced me to
"accidentally jibe" (in order to highlight and make fun of my
poor technique.) When doing this, he was not paying attention to
where Joanne was and she was injured. She was coming up from
down below and her hand was on the traveler when he had me
"accidentally jibe." Fortunately, Joanne moved quickly and did
not lose her finger, however, she did suffer a severe cut and
lost a good chunk of her flesh. Mr. Baraff's reaction was that
accidents happen when sailing and went on to list injuries he
had suffered. In the emotional arena, Mr. Baraff simply loved
pushing us to do things without fully describing what he wanted
us to do. He had Joanne in tears numerous times and seemed to
take great pleasure in this. In our opinion, he has a serious
case of "little man syndrome." Beware, Tom & Joanne Byrnes