Sailing practice logbook
Use this after every lesson, club sail, simulator run, or dockside practice day. The goal is not just hours. Track what you actually practiced, what conditions you handled, what still feels weak, and what to drill next.
Practice intelligence
The logbook now looks for skill depth, stale topics, confidence trend, and simulator versus on-water balance. It turns saved entries into a study prescription instead of a plain diary.
Next drill queue
Generated from open skills, low-confidence reps, stale topics, and your most recent next-drill notes.
New practice entry
Skills practiced
Entries stay in this browser unless you export them.
Skill depth map
Saved entries
How to use the log
- After every sail, write the conditions first. Wind, current, visibility, and boat type explain why a skill felt easy or hard.
- Log the skill, not just the outing. "Tacked ten times and got stuck in irons twice" is more useful than "went sailing."
- Pick one next drill. A short, specific next rep turns each sail into a learning loop.
- Watch for stale skills. If a topic has not appeared in the log recently, rehearse it before it shows up under pressure.
- Use the learning plan, practice tests, and simulator between sails to target the weak spots.