thinwater
Well-Known Member
Good points.1. The lifesavers allow a boat hook to be used to secure the lifesaver and attach to the boat. It negates the most difficult part, in my opinion, actually grabbing the MOB.
2. The life sling is a good idea, I carry one, but it requires the MOB to be conscious to use it, otherwise you are relying on luck that it will catch as you circle round. In my waters, cold shock is very likely and rapid debilitation followed by unconsciousness is to be expected. Also, you need to be able to reach down to the life sling lifting point, which may not be a straightforward thing to achieve. Not all lifejackets have lifting points, so in this case, a life sling could be useful.
In my case, sailing predominately as a couple, on my boat, this is what I have settled on: lifesavers on all my lifejackets, and an 8:1 lifting tackle, which I connect to my spinnikar halyard to raise to a working height, then cleat off. The topping lift, spare genoa halyard and mainsail halyard can all be used as well. Other end goes on the lifesling, easy peasy.
Personally, my experience is that you need to get the boat alongside, upwind, to lift MOB out, positioning the boat by sail or motor.
As I said earlier, develop a system that works for you and practise, iron out the issues, so you have a working system you can rely on, without the MOB aiding you in any way (irrespective of water temperature).
I have reversed over my life sling chopping the lanyard. This happened practising, demoing, a very useful method. Do the so called crash stop by tacking (in a controlled way but don’t release genoa sheets, dump main sheet, heave too. Normally you will be upwind of MOB, and the next steps only work if you are. Switch on engine, then use reverse to back up to MOB remaining heave too, up wind, then with bursts of reverse and forward, drift down onto MOB, kill engine, recover MOB. This method is just another tool in the box. Try it with a bucket and fender.
I have done hundreds of MOB drills. As said earlier, only when I had to demonstrate MOB recovery onto the boat, that I realised I didn’t have a clue how to do that successfully, confidently. Hence I landed on the kit stated and have drilled with that.
It’s great that you’re developing a method and questioning stuff. All the best with your endeavours, and I hope my experience gives you food for thought.
- Plans that require mucsle don't work for cruising couples, since the big bloke is the one in the water. That is what this thread is about, really.
- Note that they used the transom ladder and that very little muscle was needed. The transom was moving a lot less than the side and they didn't have the high freeboard to contend with.
To me, the interesting topic is COB recovery for couples. Only one person on deck. Crash stop and muscle are not going to work:
- Maybe the other person is below. No crash stop.
- No one at the helm while hoisting/muscling. The boat will not hold station/heading unless carefully hove to. Not likely.
- Very little muscle. And if the crew falls in, you are both dead.