rafiki_
Well-Known Member
It’s only got to happen once.That only happens in movies, a mans head is rarely on the end of his feet as he's jumping off the bathing platform.
It’s only got to happen once.That only happens in movies, a mans head is rarely on the end of his feet as he's jumping off the bathing platform.
He might swim faster, but unless he’s an unusually good swimmer and/or in very sheltered waters he’s risks - cold shock, not getting to them anyway (seeing the casualty when you are both at water level is very hard), not being able to get the casualty back to the boat, not being able to climb back on board, etc.I have a friend with small children, they all wear life jackets apart from him. He says in one of them falls in (his youngest is 5 ish) he'll forget his PW2 man overboard, and simply dive in, no life jacket means he'll swim faster.
So who is in charge of the boat after he dives in ?I have a friend with small children, they all wear life jackets apart from him. He says in one of them falls in (his youngest is 5 ish) he'll forget his PW2 man overboard, and simply dive in, no life jacket means he'll swim faster.
The who's in charge question, sensible as it is, forgets the instinct of the father saving his kid. He's not thinking of a boat bobbing on the water, he looking at his kid's head bobbing in the ocean.So who is in charge of the boat after he dives in ?
Years ago had a discussion with brother inlaw who said he would dive in if his children went overboard. I told him that it meant 2 people to be rescued rather than one and that normally the person diving in was the one who didn't survive. Not to sure on the survival bit but it made him think about the consequences.
The kids (my niece & nephew) always wore LJ when underway and could swim reasonably well in seawater, and they had been taught to always hold on to the boat when moving around.
What’s plan B when the boat blows off downwind faster than any of them can swim and they’re out of reach of the shore?The who's in charge question, sensible as it is, forgets the instinct of the father saving his kid. He's not thinking of a boat bobbing on the water, he looking at his kid's head bobbing in the ocean.
Ok Im out. Too many people trying and succeeding in being pedantic.
And that’s the one time when jumping in might help. If the wife hadn’t got there first of course.Back in the early nineties we had a 24 ft boat we were in Torquay marina , red hot day my son was leaning over the back of the boat playing with a toy boat on piece of string . I was on the bow messing with the anchor. Both our kids always had life jackets on , only 5 and 6 year old , the wife screams, Dax has fell in , so I dive in from the front looking under water for him panicking I had to come up for breath, thinking he was stuck under the Hull, I can hear wife shouting but I go under again needing air, I surface again and shout I can't find him , then I hear Daddy look up there he is smiling. The wife whilst I had panicked and dived in he had just popped back to the surface and wife got him by the scruff and pulled him out. We still laugh at my poor performance . So when peeps say lj is in the locker ready to put on , it's bollix. Can you imagine you are driving down a road slow suddenly a car pulls out on you , and see it is going to hit it 10 seconds would you have time to put your belt on.NO