forelle541
Well-Known Member
I have to do a sea survival course for work, clambering in to life rafts from the water is hard work even in flat water, if you carry a life raft you also need a strong young person to throw in first to pull you in!
Permanent liveaboards so yes, we have a life raft. How many of us however have a properly packed grab bag on longer passages just in case? Not us anyhow..
I do! Fire on a yacht at sea is a great decider.
However, "statistically" almost non existent on sailing boats. Not necessarily the fire, but as a cause of foundering and therefore potential deployment of a liferaft.
Three main causes are extreme weather, collision and structural failure - last one almost all on racing boats.
How many of us however have a properly packed grab bag on longer passages just in case? Not us anyhow..
Clever bugger! We do have a very impressive medical kit. Oh damn, that's thanks to your list... Hehe
>£200 for a service & if its a seago dont bother
Relying on a dinghy particularly a part inflated one is really clutching at straws.
'cos I don't.
Admittedly, 90% of my sailing is within the Solent but I do stray from time to time - sometimes across to France.
In fact, I was chatting about going this summer and the person I was chatting with was amazed that I had never had a liferaft on board. Am I exceedingly reckless? I work on the basis that I've got a tender in the event that I ever need to abandon ship and that'll I'll do all in my power to ever arrive at such an eventuality.
We carry one, poised and ready to launch on the rail. We also have a dinghy (kept deflated though), life-jackets on all the time we sail, epirb, vhf x3 etc etc. Our view was that in the very unlikely event something dreadful did happen we want every chance and every tool there is to stay alive. We sail manly coastal but like others do venture offshore now and again. We thought about the dinghy instead of LR but then quickly realised that trying to stay in it in any sort of breaking sea has got to be very difficult. If we are really honest I guess it's more peace of mind than anything else.
Relying on a dinghy particularly a part inflated one is really clutching at straws. If you look at the reports of yachts that have foundered, whether liferafts have been deployed or not, you would be hard pushed to find an example where a dinghy would have been any help at all. As I suggested earlier, there are 3 dominant causes of foundering and they are almost all either in extreme conditions where even a liferaft can struggle or are catastrophic events. Interestingly in two cases where the foundering was in benign conditions where a dinghy might have been a viable substitute for the liferaft actually used, the need for either could have been avoided if the casualty had available a functioning VHF to summon help.
Should add a caveat that there have been examples where a dinghy has been a useful supplement to a liferaft, but these have been in founderings in oceans rather than in coastal waters as we are discussing here.
However, "statistically" almost non existent on sailing boats. Not necessarily the fire, but as a cause of foundering and therefore potential deployment of a liferaft.
Three main causes are extreme weather, collision and structural failure - last one almost all on racing boats.
My boat (an Etap) is unsinkable, but I still have a life raft. Because I understand although unsinkable they still burn.
Chap who taught me Day Skipper a few years ago, was crewing in a small racing yacht in the 1970s that sank off the Dutch coast.
They took to the liferaft.
Anyone want to hear the rest of the story?
Yep, please tell, always like to hear about stuff like this, especially if there is a lesson in it.