Questioned by RNLI re not wearing lifejacket.

There must be an awful lot of stupid people in the USA, and Italy, and many other countries, then!

And where do you draw the line? How about a battery-powered push-bike? How about a push-bike? How about a kiddies push-along scooter? Roller blah?

blah mumble blah blah? blah mumble blah blah? mumble? Blah? wha wha wha?

blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah "momium" blah grossly mumble.

blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah .

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Yes, the RNLI guy was OTT. I have been through all this before with crash helmets and motorbikes. Only the stupid would not wear a crash helmet when riding a powered two wheeler.

I've got a Velosolex moped. Top speed on a good day is 24mph. I've never really seen any point in wearing a helmet on it, though of course I do.
 
Yes, the RNLI guy was OTT. I have been through all this before with crash helmets and motorbikes. Only the stupid would not wear a crash helmet when riding a powered two wheeler. For me it is as natural as dressing in the morning. Wearing a lifejacket is the same. I choose to wear one whilst sailing.I may not put it on untill the warps and fenders are stowed, but once out of harbour it is on, and stays on when on deck. If you cannot understand the benifits by now, and are a non wearer you are not to be convinced. Untill compulsion you are able to make a choice.There is a RNLI sticker on our boat about lifejackets. It says"USELESS UNLESS WORN". This appears to sum it up nicely. Good Sailing in 2011, Rotrax.

Welcome to the forum. I presume you didn't bother to read all the thread.:rolleyes:

I can remember when it wasn't compulsory to wear a helmet & I can remember one hot summer riding along the prom in just my speedos. You have to experience it to understand, but I guess it is still possible in places around the med. Sure I wore all the gear for longer trips, for bad weather or night time - same with life jackets. I have them & I wear them if there is a likelyhood of going in the oggin. But generally, I use the harness aspect rather than the flotation.
 
...... I can remember one hot summer riding along the prom in just my speedos.....

No, no, no,no, NO! I much preferred the image of young lady with the huge mammary glands.

Merry Christmas Searush, hope 2011 is a good year for you.

BlowingOldBoots
 
you'll only miss not wearing a lifejacket once! Having lots of experience doesn't mean that you float better.
No, but it might make you able to assess risk better, and a bit less gullible.

Plenty of people have died wearing lifejackets (and other safety equipment) that they thought would save them.
 
Yes, the RNLI guy was OTT. I have been through all this before with crash helmets and motorbikes. Only the stupid would not wear a crash helmet when riding a powered two wheeler. For me it is as natural as dressing in the morning. Wearing a lifejacket is the same. I choose to wear one whilst sailing.I may not put it on untill the warps and fenders are stowed, but once out of harbour it is on, and stays on when on deck. If you cannot understand the benifits by now, and are a non wearer you are not to be convinced. Untill compulsion you are able to make a choice.There is a RNLI sticker on our boat about lifejackets. It says"USELESS UNLESS WORN". This appears to sum it up nicely. Good Sailing in 2011, Rotrax.

Ludicrous! You are at much more danger of falling overboard when getting your warps and fenders aboard and stowed, than you are when sitting in the cockpit.

The time that I am most likely to wear a lifejacket, (actually a buoyancy aid), is when going back and forward in the dinghy. But that is my own personal choice, and long may it continue to be.
 
Yes, the RNLI guy was OTT. I have been through all this before with crash helmets and motorbikes. Only the stupid would not wear a crash helmet when riding a powered two wheeler. For me it is as natural as dressing in the morning. Wearing a lifejacket is the same. I choose to wear one whilst sailing.I may not put it on untill the warps and fenders are stowed, but once out of harbour it is on, and stays on when on deck. If you cannot understand the benifits by now, and are a non wearer you are not to be convinced. Untill compulsion you are able to make a choice.There is a RNLI sticker on our boat about lifejackets. It says"USELESS UNLESS WORN". This appears to sum it up nicely. Good Sailing in 2011, Rotrax.
You seem to be saying that only the stupid would not wear a lifejacket.

Thanks.

Welcome to the forum.
 
Came ashore from our mooring in Dartmouth in our 2.8m RIB and was immediately accosted by local RNLI chap who asked why I wasn't wearing a lifejacket? Was initially somewhat taken aback but answered that it was my choice not to wear one, he countered with did I know about the shock of falling into cold water, didn't like to say that the water in October is warmer than any other time of year. Explained that as a diver I am well aware of water temperatures. With that he then questioned my partner in the same accusatory fashion.
Is this common place? I appreciate all the arguments for wearing a lifejacket but I choose not to and I don't expect to be accosted by the local RNLI. I wasn't sure how I felt as he walked away muttering something or other, not really angry but a little annoyed to be questioned in a fairly aggressive manner. Has not happened to me in 25 odd years of boating, still in 2 minds as to whether he was being a bit of a pr@t or actually trying to help. After speaking to us he didn't hang around to speak to other dinghy crews.


Jobs worth simple as that!
 
Hi, DownWest.The sticker makes a factual statement. If you are in the hoggin and your lifejacket is in the locker it wont help you stay afloat.I can usually tell which way the wind is blowing-memory has never been required for that job.
 
Ludicrous! You are at much more danger of falling overboard when getting your warps and fenders aboard and stowed, than you are when sitting in the cockpit.

The time that I am most likely to wear a lifejacket, (actually a buoyancy aid), is when going back and forward in the dinghy. But that is my own personal choice, and long may it continue to be.

Hi,Ludicrous or not,like you it is my personal choice.Untill you are aware of where my boat is situated and the time/distance that I am SOMETIMES without a lifejacket you cannot make a judgement on the likelyhood of me going over the side.Like you, it is something Iam comfortable with.
 
Hi, DownWest.The sticker makes a factual statement. If you are in the hoggin and your lifejacket is in the locker it wont help you stay afloat.I can usually tell which way the wind is blowing-memory has never been required for that job.
If you are in hoggin you definitely don't need a lifejacket! A pick-axe, maybe.

(Hoggin is the stuff used to make "rustic" paths and car parks - it's like a mixture of small stones and sand)
 
Answer: Move here to the French Mediterraen. No one wears a life jacket, not even the children. UK? Health and safety gone mad!
Now I'm not saying lifejackets are not a good idea, but teaching folk to rely on them is equally a bad idea. Here, no crash helmets for the little sailors; apparently a good bang on the head teaches them to duck, as it did for you and I, and a good near drowning teaches the value of a life jacket.

I bought one for my dog and a local; sailing, vet pointed out all I was doing was delaying the inevitable, he would still drown, but it would take longer and induce more panic!!!!
 
In 30 years of Med. sailing I've worn a life-jacket once - it was a wild ride and I could hardly hold on at times - although what good it would have done in those conditions I cannot imagine, particularly as I was alone. Of course, on that occasion and a little more frequently I have worn a harness and clipped on as I am usually single-handed and don't like the thought of watching the yacht crashing on under autopilot without me.

The thought of having something extra on the skin in +30 degree temperatures just doesn't appeal and it is certainly very rare to see LJs being worn where I sail.
 
There must be an awful lot of stupid people in the USA, and Italy, and many other countries, then!

And where do you draw the line? How about a battery-powered push-bike? How about a push-bike? How about a kiddies push-along scooter? Roller blades?

And why stop at a crash-helmet? How about leathers? Gloves? Boots? Will kevlar jeans do?

This whole business of the benefits of safety equipment being "obvious" is grossly oversimplified.

How trivial must the risk be before you can ignore it? How minor must the consequences be before you can dismiss them? How unreliable can safety equipment be before you question whether it is adequate? And how expensive must it be before you feel justified in saying "no, thank you: I'll take my chance".

Thats right. Do you know the work of John Adams?

"What does a transport safety regulator have in common with a shaman conducting a rain dance? They both have an inflated opinion of the effectiveness of their interventions in the functioning of the complex interactive systems they purport to influence or control. There is however a significant difference. The clouds are indifferent to the antics of the shaman and his followers. But people react to the edicts of a regulator and frequently not in the way the regulator intends. There are two different kinds of manager involved in the management of transport risks: there are the “official”, institutional, risk managers who strive incessantly to make the systems for which they are responsible safer, and there are the billions of individual fallible human users of the systems, each balancing the rewards of risk against the potential accident risks associated with their behaviour. Conventional road safety measures rest on a model of human behavior that assumes that road users are stupid, obedient automatons who are unresponsive to perceived changes in risk and who need protecting, by law, from their own and others’ stupidity. The idea of risk compensation underpins an alternative model of human behavior: that road users are intelligent, vigilant, responsive to evidence of safety and danger and, given the right signals and incentives, considerate."



Much the same applies to many other attempts to make people safer than they judge appropriate. Very few work, including seat belt legislation.
 
Answer: Move here to the French Mediterraen. No one wears a life jacket, not even the children. UK? Health and safety gone mad!
Now I'm not saying lifejackets are not a good idea, but teaching folk to rely on them is equally a bad idea. Here, no crash helmets for the little sailors; apparently a good bang on the head teaches them to duck, as it did for you and I, and a good near drowning teaches the value of a life jacket.

I bought one for my dog and a local; sailing, vet pointed out all I was doing was delaying the inevitable, he would still drown, but it would take longer and induce more panic!!!!
Even if you've been taught to duck, sometimes you can still get bashed on the head. I have dinghy raced for decades, but now wear a helmet because I have had 1 skirmish with the boom requiring stitches, once caught by the gunwhale as the boat righted (stitches again) and once a mighty whack when a gybe went horribly wrong. As you get older you get slower!
Same judgment with lifejackets. I havnt been told to wear one, it now just makes sense. Besides which if you dinghy race you know the value of a personal bouyancy aid (and drysuits and wetsocks etc.!) if you capsize into a lake which has just dethawed! The personal bouyancy aid gives you that moment to catch your breath as the cold hits you before you start the process of righting the dinghy.
 
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