On the pebbled edge of England’s Jurassic Coast, the RYA First Aid Course offers a concentrated, practical day of marine-focused emergency training. Based in Poole, on Dorset’s coast, this one-day program teaches boaters, skippers, and crew the skills to manage real incidents at sea—CPR, confined-space recovery, hypothermia treatment, and techniques for working with delayed professional help. The course is MCA approved and aligns with qualifications required for RYA instructors, Coastal Skipper, Yachtmaster, and advanced powerboat certificates, making it both a competence booster and a formal credential for commercial and recreational sailors. You’ll spend roughly 9:15 to 17:30 in hands-on scenarios guided by experienced RYA instructors who emphasize decision-making under pressure. Training focuses on practical problem solving for small-craft situations: casualty assessment in tight cockpits, drowning protocols adapted for cold water immersion, managing shock and fractures on pitching decks, using on-board first-aid kits, and coordinating helicopter or VHF-assisted evacuations. The controlled, realistic drills are designed around the local marine environment—steep chalk and limestone cliffs, fossil-rich beds, and tidal estuaries that define the Jurassic Coast—so what you learn maps directly to the hazards you’ll face off Poole and along nearby Lulworth Cove and Durdle Door. Class sizes are intentionally small (maximum 12) to ensure ample instructor attention and repeated practice on techniques like CPR in confined spaces. The course suits anyone who heads afloat: day sailors, commercial crew, and expedition leaders. Minimum age is 12; there are no technical prerequisites beyond the physical ability to perform CPR and follow instruction. Beyond skill acquisition, the RYA First Aid Course is a practical way to connect with local maritime culture. The Jurassic Coast became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001 and the training draws on decades of local sea experience and incident history. New Wave Training’s cancellation policy is straightforward: refunds vary by notice period, and weather or safety-related cancellations are rebooked or refunded. Bring sturdy footwear, weatherproof layers, a pen and notebook, and a willingness to get hands-on. Passing leaves you with a working knowledge that could turn a vulnerable situation into a managed response, and the confidence to stay out on the water responsibly. For anyone planning to cruise, race, charter, or work commercially along the Dorset coast, this focused, accredited day course is a practical upgrade to both safety and seamanship. Sessions often include simulated callouts that use VHF case studies and briefings on on-board kit selection—what to carry in small craft and how to improvise with scarce resources. Poole Harbour, one of Europe’s largest natural harbours, gives trainees a classroom: shifting tides, strong estuary currents, and busy harbors. That mix of accredited curriculum and local sea conditions makes this course a pragmatic choice for anyone responsible for people afloat.