MainlySteam
Well-Known Member
Re: Grab bags? ORC Specs
Oh my goodness!
Which do you put in the liferaft - the crew or the grab bag and ditch kit? Certainly isn't room enough for all in ours (in case someone seriously suggests a larger raft, the raft should be sized to the number of crew and preferably not be oversized for the case of rough conditions).
It should be pointed out before everyone rushes out to buy all the items mentioned in order to stock their grab bags that the current ISAF Special Regulations for Cat 1 nor Cat 0 do not require that items ordinarily required to be on the boat be duplicated eg one does not need to buy 2 x 406 EPIRBs in order to comply. They are expected to be stowed in the grab bag however.
Also the ditch kit is not from the ISAF Special regulations at all, unless it is squirrelled away from most of us in some place yet to be discovered.
Because of the large open sea area around New Zealand (NAVAREA XIV, for which NZ is responsible, is one of the largest search and rescue areas in the world) all departing NZ flagged pleasure vessels have to submit to a safety inspection before departure overseas, which subject to flexible interpretation to suit the circumstances approximates CAT 1. The emphasis is on rapid location and recovery, not on the ability to survive for more than the time it takes the nearest aid to reach one. I cannot recall any NZ yacht being lost without trace, in recent years, in the departure voyage from NZ (at least 1200 plus nm to next reasonably big landfall) nor of an instance where the crew of a lost vessel have not been recovered in much more than a day if they had time to get into the raft and the conditions were survivable in that.
As most forumites live in areas with far larger rescue services resources concentrated over far smaller NAVAREAs, perhaps the above should be kept in mind when stocking a grab bag.
John
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Oh my goodness!
Which do you put in the liferaft - the crew or the grab bag and ditch kit? Certainly isn't room enough for all in ours (in case someone seriously suggests a larger raft, the raft should be sized to the number of crew and preferably not be oversized for the case of rough conditions).
It should be pointed out before everyone rushes out to buy all the items mentioned in order to stock their grab bags that the current ISAF Special Regulations for Cat 1 nor Cat 0 do not require that items ordinarily required to be on the boat be duplicated eg one does not need to buy 2 x 406 EPIRBs in order to comply. They are expected to be stowed in the grab bag however.
Also the ditch kit is not from the ISAF Special regulations at all, unless it is squirrelled away from most of us in some place yet to be discovered.
Because of the large open sea area around New Zealand (NAVAREA XIV, for which NZ is responsible, is one of the largest search and rescue areas in the world) all departing NZ flagged pleasure vessels have to submit to a safety inspection before departure overseas, which subject to flexible interpretation to suit the circumstances approximates CAT 1. The emphasis is on rapid location and recovery, not on the ability to survive for more than the time it takes the nearest aid to reach one. I cannot recall any NZ yacht being lost without trace, in recent years, in the departure voyage from NZ (at least 1200 plus nm to next reasonably big landfall) nor of an instance where the crew of a lost vessel have not been recovered in much more than a day if they had time to get into the raft and the conditions were survivable in that.
As most forumites live in areas with far larger rescue services resources concentrated over far smaller NAVAREAs, perhaps the above should be kept in mind when stocking a grab bag.
John
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