Baggywrinkle
Well-Known Member
Should my kids be wearing life jackets? It wouldn't half cramp their style .....
I would love to see the risk assessment - reminds me of the time I had to do a risk assessment for someone who had fallen out of bed and make recommendations for preventing a re occurrence...![]()
I would love to see the risk assessment - reminds me of the time I had to do a risk assessment for someone who had fallen out of bed and make recommendations for preventing a re occurrence...![]()
I always wear a life jacket under way plus i have my life jackets tested annually
I always tell crew that on a normal day i would like them to wear l js but it is their choice
However, once a reef goes in the main any crew on deck wears a life jacket
Once the nav lights go on so do ljs plus harness lines
If they do not want to do that then i tell them to sail with someone else
I have been over the side 3 times in 45 years. It is not funny looking at the boat several feet away from the water
Now i am retired i know i would not stay awake long in cold water so i want all the help i can get
But there again i also sail a Phantom dinghy & sailboard so i have done my share of swimming after boats
The answer is to wear one when the risk warrants it.
I doubt whether any of the "wear it all the time" exponents wear one all the time when anchored or tied up in the marina - is the risk any worse when coming alongside than it is when getting off the boat the next morning to go to the showers? What next everyone wears one when sat in the cockpit for the evening meal?
Reading this, its reminds about the argument over whether you need a helmet on a Motorbike. ........
It would be interesting to see some figures, I am not convinced the risk is necessarily reduced in a moored boat. From personal experience I have gone in twice - once from a pontoon and once from a stationary boat next to a pontoon. But I still don't consider the risk high enough to wear a lifejacket in the marina, the outcome would have been no different on each occasion if I had been wearing one.I agree and for me the risk (even on a lake) warrants it most of the time when not moored...
Do you always use a harness line?
If i go on deck - yes
Unless it is very light winds & i have a crew who could retrieve me if i went over
however, 90% of my sailing is SH
It is a bit like a car seat belt. Once you get used to wearing it it becomes automatic
however, 90% of my sailing is SH
It is a bit like a car seat belt. Once you get used to wearing it it becomes automatic
Nearly all my sailing is singlehanded. A couple of years ago it was a bit rough crossing the channel so I did have LJ & harness on. When putting in a reef I found I was always teathered in the wrong place and the jackstays were not a lot of help either. Since then I have returned to the old way of working - one hand for the ship and one for yourself.
Surely the answer is to organise your boat properly so things are in the right place
If they are not then the boat is not properly set up
Indeed - you could probably just as well have swum ashore in the first place
Pete
if you fall off the boat as it is coming close to the pontoon, the risk is not simply landing in the water, it's the things you hit on your way in and the condition you are in when you land in the water - trust me - I've done it! Likewise the boom - yes, I can walk back and forth along the side deck all day without falling in - till you get caught by a crash gybe - again, it's not the falling into the water, it's the state you may be in before you hit the water!
Both of which, surely, are arguments for wearing...
...a crash helmet.
I do believe that anyone involved in jumping from a boat to a pontoon or other boat really should wear a lifejacket - if you miss, you could easily find yourself in the water either unconscious or with a broken limb - and that is enough to drown even an Olympic swimmer.
People should never jump from a boat!
People should never jump from a boat!