Perhaps a valid point?

iangrant

Well-Known Member
Joined
16 May 2001
Messages
3,272
Location
By the Sea
Visit site
A friend and me are off across the channel with our eldest daughters - our two wives following on the ferry with our youngest to meet up in Guernsey.
The other eveing my wife came down to the boat. (After recovering items I have smuggled out of the house for the last nine months) She bashed her ankle on one of the securing points in the cockpit. I said "oh yes that's where we will all be clipped on once we get out of the harbour", I got a reply - "oh, so if she sinks you'll all get dragged down" - Answer that!

Ian
 
Probabilities...

You are much more likely to be thrown about possibly overboard than the boat sink quickly enough for you not to be able to open your Gibb Hook, innit?

Steve Cronin
 
Re: Probabilities...

Of course you are right Steve, any risk assesment would favour being clipped on - it just got me thinking, run down by a container ship/fast ferry, just how long would one get to unclip, grab the bag, radio the mayday, deploy the liferaft, get the children in it etc......

Ian
 
You've obviously got the same sort of wife as me, a born pessimist! :-) However this is always an argument bout what you should or should not do in fog. Personally I clip on, but I always carry a sharp knife in my pocket so that if the clip gets stuck, bent, out of reach etc I can cut the line.

Jim
 
I guess they do have a point - having seen over the years on various boats, things can and do go wrong, a wife's perception of just how wrong or dangerous is sometimes different to ours.
Like a nutter, I had to offer a demonstration - "just look at how easy it is to unfurl the mainsail, I don't have to leave the cockpit". I should have bloody well known better, would the sodding thing come out, you bet it wouldn't.

Ian
 
Normally its not the adults we're really concerned about, they can look after themselves, its the kiddies!

Jim
 
Top