Poignard
Well-known member
Life belt thrown overboard.
Reach > tack > reach.
Reach > tack > reach.
Fair one. I sail loadsa different yachts where that doesn't happen! Especially with lazy Jacks to get the battens caught in.....I just release the clutch and mine smokes down.
By the time someone throws a lifering, you generally have a lifering nowhere near the person in the water.Life belt thrown overboard.
Reach > tack > reach.
Couple of times......but just when coming alongside. A simple slip on the dock. That's why I prefer crew to stay on the boat and lasso cleats and bollards whenever possible.Has anyone done this in real life situation? I had a sailing instructor in Croatia who's other half would jump in when you least expected it, he jokingly said this is 'MLB, man left behind'
By the time someone throws a lifering, you generally have a lifering nowhere near the person in the water.
I often demonstrate this and everyone is surprised. Then I show them how to stop then steer back to the casualty and hand them the lifering.....
Interesting considering you sail with a lot of novices. Though I wonder if more experienced people are more likely to fall in as less afraid to move about on a boat so when that weird wake hits they're gripping on less aggressively.Open water? Practiced thousands, never had a real one, fingers crossed!
I've turned back and recovered a couple of hats and a towel in the past..Has anyone done this in real life situation? I had a sailing instructor in Croatia who's other half would jump in when you least expected it, he jokingly said this is 'MLB, man left behind'
Not really. I've sailed on heaps of deliveries with very experienced crew. Most can move around deck very comfortably, no matter the weather.Interesting considering you sail with a lot of novices. Though I wonder if more experienced people are more likely to fall in as less afraid to move about on a boat so when that weird wake hits they're gripping on less aggressively.
Try a brand new big round blue fender that the boat owner didn't tie a line on properly in a fair breeze and Atlantic swell! Was probably my favourite recovery. Took a while though. Especially as there were two of us and my good friend who owns the boat was doing his best not to be sick.I've turned back and recovered a couple of hats and a towel in the past..
We never got back in time to recover a sinking shoe...
Seen these?No GPS on that one. These are no good if people are on a tether either. Again making me think using (badly laid out) tethers in calm weather is a bad idea. In poor weather its more likely there would be someone else in the cockpit who would notice, but I can imagine someone on watch on a calm night not bothering to wake someone else but clipping on thinking its calm enough to nip up the front to do something, going over, alarm won't sound. They have been better floating free.
Too busy looking for the Beacon in the holder on my LJIf you're single handed then praying is probably best.
Not into anything phone app reliant on a boat tbh. Battery life. Easily dropped. Wet fingers on screens. Fragile. City gear, not for wild sailing.Seen these?
Exposure OLAS Tag - Man Overboard System
Works on bluetooth to peoples phones. Records GPS position on an app. Would work with a tether assuming the persons wrist is underwater.
I've thought for the money maybe worth it as I do a bit of racing overnight.