jbweston
Well-Known Member
Part of the challenge is the difference between being safe and feeling safe.
What are the real risks, objectively assessed, of having to take to a liferaft? Versus, how safe do I as skipper and the crew feel with or without a liferaft on the boat?
So:
For 14 years I've had an Ocean Safety liferaft (properly serviced), dan buoy, man overboard heaving line and horseshoe lifebuoy on my pushpit every time I went to sea. None of it has ever been used. Was it a wise precaution or waste of money? A matter of opinion - and what you might call psychological outlook or attitude to risk.
What are the real risks, objectively assessed, of having to take to a liferaft? Versus, how safe do I as skipper and the crew feel with or without a liferaft on the boat?
So:
- Skipper A could feel totally safe even if his boat is a death trap from dodgy gas and petrol intsallations, lack of skipper experience, and unsuitabilty for the weather likely to be experienced, etc., etc.
- Skipper B could feel at risk despite excellent boat preparation and maintenance, good skippering skills and the rest.
- Obviously fact and feelings can overlap or coincide - a feeling based on objective fact that the boat isn't safe or the opposite a feeling that everything practical has been done to make the boat and voyage safe.
For 14 years I've had an Ocean Safety liferaft (properly serviced), dan buoy, man overboard heaving line and horseshoe lifebuoy on my pushpit every time I went to sea. None of it has ever been used. Was it a wise precaution or waste of money? A matter of opinion - and what you might call psychological outlook or attitude to risk.