justanothersailboat
Well-Known Member
I wasn't suggesting it had a practical use! (edit: I mean the parachute. Not the lifejacket)
Last edited:
I had a huge row at Plymouth Brittany Ferries 9 years ago about this, going off to do a delivery as a foot passenger. The manager got very upset when I filmed him trying to reply to my question "so, if Ive got this correct, you are prohibiting me from bringing a life jacket onto your boat?"
They allowed me and my crew to travel eventually, but I got a letter a few weeks after from the port ops manager saying I was no longer welcome on Brittany Ferries....
For completeness I’ll confess my experience was with Brittany Ferries.I my experience (both personal and professional) Brittany Ferries can be a very odd bunch indeed.
...it's not just you!
Bear in mind, every seat on the plane already has a lifejacket stashed nearby, complete with CO2 cartridge.I cannot understand why a CO2 life jacket would be dangerous on a ferry. On an airplane yes. I took my dive buoyancy aid in the cabin for a flight to Perth then on to Melbourn and Great Barrier reef with no issues
A BCD is just an inflatable bag, there isn't normally any compressed gas cylinder until you connect it to your breathing air cylinder.I cannot understand why a CO2 life jacket would be dangerous on a ferry. On an airplane yes. I took my dive buoyancy aid in the cabin for a flight to Perth then on to Melbourn and Great Barrier reef with no issues
Most airlines are used to travelling skydivers carrying their equipment in hand luggage and allow it.Ryanair? Oxygen's extra!
Objecting to lifejackets on a (ferry) boat seems crazy and awful to me and is clearly a bit of a problem in some sailing one-way trip scenarios. But I wonder if there is a sort-of-not-crazy-if-you-squint-hard-enough reason: maybe they're worried about nervous, panicky passengers doing something unexpected, maybe during a real emergency, and finding some way to make it worse. An unlikely event, but I imagine it features more prominently in their safety planning than one-way trips by yacht crew.
(In the same way as I bet airlines won't be thrilled if a nervous flier has a parachute in a cabin bag... then again, they might think you're a D B Cooper wannabe. That could be worse)
They have a specific rules forbidding taking rabbits on boardI my experience (both personal and professional) Brittany Ferries can be a very odd bunch indeed.
...it's not just you!
Rabbits are not allowed on our boat either.They have a specific rules forbidding taking rabbits on board
Lets have no more rabbit talk around here!It’s only a short hop across the Solent though -Brittany travel somewhat further and more competently than Wightlink.
I can think of a few:Out of interest, is there any reason why a yottie shouldn't use his own LJ in preference to the bulky things provided by ferry companies in an emergency?
Thirdly, the reason commercial outfits use foam lifejackets rather than inflatable is that they are much more robust.I can think of a few:
You're abandoning ship, and some other passenger starts going on about why that person has a different LJ and how they want one and so on. Not what you need from the ship's side when things are going sub-optimal.
Second, the ship is liable for your safety. If you relied on your kit and it failed, then Q1 to the ship would be why they allowed this. Doubly so if this caused you to no longer be around.
Indeed so. If using an MES I'd rather be in an oldschool wheelmark LJ than a spinlock.Thirdly, the reason commercial outfits use foam lifejackets rather than inflatable is that they are much more robust.
When I did my sea survival courses I was told that if available, a foam lifejacket was safer because it can't get punctured.
They often have a real problem with rafts because they usually have flares stowed inside. I was advised by the vendor to, "put a blanket over it", when taking a new raft from London to the IoW..20 or more years ago, along with 2 crew, I delivered a yacht from Gosport to Le Havre. Bit grim weather so as well as foulies, I took a 4 man liferaft off of one of our yachts. All prudent, really.
We came back on the ferry. Which was delayed quite a bit marooning us, our kit and the liferaft in the ferry terminal bar. I think that we were the only ones who found this amusing when we finally boarded and had to put the raft in their small sickbay.
Being roughy toughy sailors, the voyage back was, well, in the bar. Portsmouth didn't give us the kindest of welcome homes.....
Parachute on a flight might be a better analogy. I imagine they would look at the rest of your luggage quite carefully.I suppose it’s how you look at things.....for example, nobody here would think it’s good if a bunch of revellers were onboard setting off flares.....or if someone took a CO2 cylinder on a flight...