Learn more about boating with CPS Boating Course in Bridgewater this winter

CPS logo.

Canadian Power & Sail Squadrons is a non-profit organization that has been connecting boaters for 70 years and continues to play a major role in Canadian boating culture.

This winter, our local Bluenose Squadron of CPS is offering the CPS Boating Course in Bridgewater. (Other squadrons across Canada will be offering this course and others. If you’re interested you can find out about them on the CPS website.)

The Boating Course goes far beyond the requirements for the Pleasure Craft Operator Card (PCOC) and is a prerequisite for more advanced courses offered by CPS.

Dinghies at dock
Dinghy dock at LaHave Yacht Club

It provides in-depth boat operation and safety training with 30+ hours of classroom instruction. As well, students will be exposed to the challenge of plotting and navigation, essential skills required for boating along our coastline.

Best of all, you interact and make new friends with fellow boaters while taking part in Canada’s premier boating course.

Testing for the Pleasure Craft Operator Card (PCOC) is included at no extra charge if you still need it.

Whether you are interested in powerboats, sailing vessels or kayaks, this introductory Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons (CPS) course is for you – and for your family members and boating friends.

Location: Sobeys Bridgewater Community Room
Dates: Monday evenings, Oct 25-Dec 13, Jan 10-Feb 14
Time: 7:00 – 9:30 p.m.
Course Fee: $190.00 includes full Student Kit.  Only $85.00 for another family member who can
share some of the training materials.
Main instructor: Frank Edison.
CPS (Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons) instructors volunteer their services.

To Register,

Please call or e-mail:

Bridgewater Parks, Rec. & Culture,
Phone: (902) 543-2274, 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
email hidden; JavaScript is required

Payment can be made by Visa/MC over the phone: (902) 543-2274, or by cheque mailed to:

Bridgewater Parks, Rec. & Culture,
62 Pleasant St,
Bridgewater NS B4V 1N1.

CPS National Website
Bluenose Squadron Website

Getting your Pleasure Craft Operator Card

Boy running outboard motor
Look who has his Pleasure Craft Operator Card!

We moved to the South Shore of Nova Scotia for the sailing, essentially. Lots of folks here have boats. There are kayaks, runabouts, sleek motor cruisers built for speed, a few “trawlers” (non-planing motor cruisers), fishing boats converted into pleasure boats, “personal watercraft” (sea-doos), small and medium-sized sailboats of all vintages, some wooden, and more (if I left your kind of boat out, no offense; just leave a comment below). No mega yachts to speak of; when you do see one of those, it’s probably “from away.”

Even if your boat is just a runabout with an outboard, and even if you’ve been running about with it since God was a boy, since September 2009, if it has a motor, you’ll need your Pleasure Craft Operator Card (PCOC) to run about with it in the future – in Canada, that is.

So there’s a bit of a rush on to get the card. Courses are popping up here and there, and presumably they’re being filled by those who’ve been putting it off all these years.

Courses are offered by various groups, such as the Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons (CPS), where I got mine in 2003 as part of their more in-depth Boating Course. CPS now offers a standalone Boat Pro course which is geared towards the PCOC exam.

Converted fishing boat
Converted fishing boat

My husband, a lifelong sailor, and our 9½-year-old son recently took a 2-evening course with local instructor Michael Ernst. Ernst uses the curriculum developed by the Lifesaving Society.

Taking a course with a group of people and a teacher who knows what he or she is talking about is actually fun. It allows you to ask questions and learn from other people’s experiences.  There are also online courses available, or you can study the materials on your own and write the standardized exam online with a proctor. Exam challenges are also held at boat shows around the country.

Course prices vary from $30 to $85 or more, depending on venue costs and what the instructor charges. Some teachers, such as the CPS instructors, offer the course voluntarily, as part of that organization’s long-standing interest in promoting safe boating through education. For other providers, including the online courses, it’s obviously a business. Some of these providers are probably showing up in the Google ads on this page, above left.

We are proud of our new young cardholder!  The card is good for life, so he has lots of time to benefit from getting it now.  It serves as a great base for developing his boating knowledge.