LeonF
Well-Known Member
After the tragic story of the singe hander who lost his life while attached to his boat...I just wondered how many of us can tell a tale of being saved from going overboard by being attached....or went overboard and were saved by not being so ???
Personally I always find it a bity of an encumbrance if having to go forward to hook on the reefing horn or some other task.. always feel I am more likely to get tangled or trip up. I have hooked on when alone while helming, but cannot say I have ever done so when leaving the cockpit except on my Dayskipper course. On the bank holidy in Mid Thames was caught in a really nasty squall, and with an inexperienced crew we donned life jackets, and I did wear the lifeline, but did not clip on when I went forward. In some ways I reckoned if I had gone overboard it would have been worse with me dragging alongside the boat. Just curious to see what others do...
Personally I always find it a bity of an encumbrance if having to go forward to hook on the reefing horn or some other task.. always feel I am more likely to get tangled or trip up. I have hooked on when alone while helming, but cannot say I have ever done so when leaving the cockpit except on my Dayskipper course. On the bank holidy in Mid Thames was caught in a really nasty squall, and with an inexperienced crew we donned life jackets, and I did wear the lifeline, but did not clip on when I went forward. In some ways I reckoned if I had gone overboard it would have been worse with me dragging alongside the boat. Just curious to see what others do...