dylanwinter
Well-Known Member
pleased to have shocked a hack
well, I am pleased to have shocked a journalist
sometimes that is a hard thing to do and perhaps the magazines should occasionally try to shock their readers.
I often wonder though, if being a specialist hack, sometimes gives you a distorted view of risks and the costs of mitigating them.
When I was a hack at farmers Weekely I had some pretty out of touch ideas about machinery, maintenance and safety.
If I do die by falling overboard sans life jacket/bouyancy aide then there might be a few told you so's on the forums. Although driving to the boat is always going to be much more dangerous than almost anything I can invent to do on the boat.
However, there is a parallel here to the bike helmet thing
By making bike helmets compulsory some lives are certainly saved
however, lots of people, such as myself, would stop cycling
and there is little doubt that cycling every day with the dog will lengthen my life
If, by chasing cheap, light, warm, cool, comfortable bouyancy aids such as those made from flotherchoc off the market means that fewer people will wear safety gear then that is surely not a good thing.
I can quite see that the full spec harnessed life jackets with epirb, crutch protector, whistles, spray hoods and coffee maker are jolly good things to have - but they really come at one heck of a price.
I think that the device on my outboard that stops it from being started while in gear was actually a bigger risk to my safety than not having it on the outboard at all.
Just curious James - have you been on many courses since you stopped being a salaried hack and have to pay for them?
Dylan
I can't believe I'm reading this.
I hate excessive H&S as much as the next man but to suggerst a buoyancy aid is better a proper lifejacket for use on a cruising boat is madness. There is a reason why lifejackets are the way they are and that is because they do the job properly when there aren't safety boats about, loads of other dinghies and a shore a few yards distant. Modern lifejackets are light, compact and very easty to put on and wear. Even I have begun to use one even when its not blowing old boots at night.
It was when I did my last Sea Survival course that the full benefit of a lifejacket with crutch strap and face protector was fully driven home. Even in a swimming pool the face protector made life a lot more comfortable and the crutch strap mean you could swim in it without it trying to come up over your nose and you could be lifted into the liferaft by it.
Sorry, I'm not often shocked by a thread here, but I am by this one.
well, I am pleased to have shocked a journalist
sometimes that is a hard thing to do and perhaps the magazines should occasionally try to shock their readers.
I often wonder though, if being a specialist hack, sometimes gives you a distorted view of risks and the costs of mitigating them.
When I was a hack at farmers Weekely I had some pretty out of touch ideas about machinery, maintenance and safety.
If I do die by falling overboard sans life jacket/bouyancy aide then there might be a few told you so's on the forums. Although driving to the boat is always going to be much more dangerous than almost anything I can invent to do on the boat.
However, there is a parallel here to the bike helmet thing
By making bike helmets compulsory some lives are certainly saved
however, lots of people, such as myself, would stop cycling
and there is little doubt that cycling every day with the dog will lengthen my life
If, by chasing cheap, light, warm, cool, comfortable bouyancy aids such as those made from flotherchoc off the market means that fewer people will wear safety gear then that is surely not a good thing.
I can quite see that the full spec harnessed life jackets with epirb, crutch protector, whistles, spray hoods and coffee maker are jolly good things to have - but they really come at one heck of a price.
I think that the device on my outboard that stops it from being started while in gear was actually a bigger risk to my safety than not having it on the outboard at all.
Just curious James - have you been on many courses since you stopped being a salaried hack and have to pay for them?
Dylan
Last edited: