BrendanS
Well-Known Member
When you swim in cold water, you stay in for 2+ hours swimming like mad then?
I must have missed the bit about other people being on board.
When you swim in cold water, you stay in for 2+ hours swimming like mad then?
I can see that logic, but when I swim in cold water, it seems far better to swim like hell - indeed swimming hard enough actually makes it comfortable. More telling, I've heard extreme cold water swimmers say "if I'd stopped swimming I'd have died in x minutes.".
Do extreme swimmers protect themselves from hypothermia with effort, whereas if they'd assumed the HELP position for the same period they'd be dead?
My gut feeling is this isn't as simple as it's made out to be.
Asking the question, not stating an opinion.
Probably you will be 'warmer' and active until you run out of 'fuel'?
Someone must have raised the alarm.
Someone must have raised the alarm.
That's my gut feeling. You don't get the warmth for free - you're burning more energy. ...but does it keep you alive longer in the short term.
What if the hull you want to bash on is doing 5 knots?
(snip)What a pity we have to rely on information gleaned from TV interviews to try to make our own sailing safer. Surely its time we had a system where accidents could be accurately reported and a more open forum to discuss improvements? Perhaps we are just not adult enough to discuss our errors.
Peter.
Thanks for the link, but wouldn't the MAIB offer the system you want? We are just pre-empting their discussion by a few months.
I can't see the interview, but this is interesting. Many people advocate clipping on instead of wearing a LJ. I agree that staying on board is important, but as most LJs come with an integral harness, isn't that the solution?From the info in that interview, it looks like she went over & under the boat so that the harness & line was stopping her coming up on the far side, hence the need to shed the l/j & line.