I've been to a similar trip (from northern France to Portugal) and I enjoyed it very much. It was really worth the money I paid (about four months of my payment...). <br><br>The most important safety rule when sailing is to stay on the yacht - use your hand, legs, harness and whatever you can to keep you there. All the skippers I know (including myself) starts the trip with a strong order to wear a safety harness during the night (regardless of the weather) and in the strong wind (e.g. more then 5B). It's really hard to find a man in the sea during bad weather. On one of my trips the skipper took the garbage bag, filled half of it with water, half with air and threw overboard shouting "Alarm! Man overboard!" - there were 5 people on the deck, some of them quite experienced but we failed to "rescue" the bag - that really convinced us to wear the harness (OK, maybe throwing plastic to the sea is not a good thing, but IMHO this time it was justified).<br><br>In my country (Poland) a skipper is obliged to talk over the safety rules, alarms , location of safety equipment, etc. with the crew during the first day of the trip. If he doesn't do that - ask.<br><br>The most important piece of knowledge you'll need is the knowledge about ships' lights and colission avoidance. General rules are: 1) every ship wants to collide with you 2) you don't have a right of way, even if you does - and the more lights has the ship (especially any colour light on the mast), the more you have to avoid him. Also check what are the lights of fishing ships using trawl (they are slow and easy to avoid, but trawls can be very long) and other means of fishing (these types are totally unpredictable - they can alter their course and speed, drag nets from every direction, etc.).<br><br>Now, about the gear - having your own safety harness, preferably with an integrated pneumatic jacket, is a good idea - it would usually be better than what you find on the boat - however, you can live without it. As always, it's good to have a knife and/or multi-tool. A small flashlight (small enough to wear all the time) would be very useful. Pack a lot of warm stuff - woolen gloves and cap, polartec jackets, etc. That's more an everyday use than survival gear - but emergency stuff should already be on the boat.<br><br>Enjoy the trip - I wish I were you, I probably won't sail till May 2003...