Cbjroms
Well-Known Member
I have moved from a small sailing cruiser to a Merry Fisher 645. Most of my sailing was single-handed and the cabin was simply used for storage. I am based in the Solent, am envisaging having more company and have been considering the difference in safety precautions required. As with sailing I will be equipped with VHF, navigation plotter, horn and charts.
The first thing is the kill-cord for the outboard which in an open boat is obviously essential but I will be driving from an enclosed wheelhouse and so the risk is more about being incapacitated having been thrown around. Do those with large, closed boats with twin diesels (for instance) still use kill-cords?
The second thing is lifejackets. I would wear one continuously when sailing but what is best practice on an enclosed motor boat? I feel that anyone moving outside the cockpit/wheelhouse should be wearing a lifejacket when handling ropes and anchoring. Depending on the weather (unlikely to have any company in any sort of sea/wind!) I would advocate lifejackets when outside the wheelhouse.
Finally I am thinking that I need to have some sort of MOB line/buoy to throw in the event that someone does go over or to help someone from another boat. A line seems to be better than the horseshoe buoys which, in my experience, are difficult to throw and cumbersome to store.
The first thing is the kill-cord for the outboard which in an open boat is obviously essential but I will be driving from an enclosed wheelhouse and so the risk is more about being incapacitated having been thrown around. Do those with large, closed boats with twin diesels (for instance) still use kill-cords?
The second thing is lifejackets. I would wear one continuously when sailing but what is best practice on an enclosed motor boat? I feel that anyone moving outside the cockpit/wheelhouse should be wearing a lifejacket when handling ropes and anchoring. Depending on the weather (unlikely to have any company in any sort of sea/wind!) I would advocate lifejackets when outside the wheelhouse.
Finally I am thinking that I need to have some sort of MOB line/buoy to throw in the event that someone does go over or to help someone from another boat. A line seems to be better than the horseshoe buoys which, in my experience, are difficult to throw and cumbersome to store.