BlueSkyNick
Well-Known Member
it would be great if the forum could allow the OP to lock a thread at a suitable point such as this!
it would be great if the forum could allow the OP to lock a thread at a suitable point such as this!
It is sadly a proven fact that cold water shock can kill instantly - a gasp reflex from your body hitting cold water can fill your lungs with water and its lights out.
It is also proven that the waters in the UK and Ireland are cold enough to cause this reflex. So those who wear LJ's as a matter of course are in my opinion totally correct to do so.
Attitudes to safety never cease to amaze me. As a former RNLI SEA Checker I can say here that whenever I went aboard other peoples' boats and began the discussion it quickly became apparent that the "wear it when the situation arises" brigade were in fact covering up for their own laziness.
The RNLI talk the talk on life jackets but they don’t’ walk the walk. You should see the jackstays on a Tyne Class boat. Plus as far as I can tell they all wear drysuits. Seems to me that for themselves they take a far more considered view on sea survival than they advocate for yachtsmen.
With some debate regarding how those LJs were worn...!The Ouzos in British Summertime went in wearing life jackets. All still died.
If your friend is using inflatable LJs in Swiftwater scenarios then he has the wrong PPE & should *probably* not be in the water.As a friend in the fireservice said after the rules changed to require the wearing of lifejackets in inland waterways rescues “From the moment the lifejacket goes off you‘re helpless and as much a casualty as the person you‘re trying to rescue.”
What a load of b*******! You don't die from inhaling water in your lungs, not even in a gasp reflex.
Toad.... a little disingenous. Are you suggesting they recommend to their crew they clip on and don't wear a LJ?
The RNLI's view on sea survival *starts* with LJ and goes on from there...
If your friend is using inflatable LJs in Swiftwater scenarios then he has the wrong PPE & should *probably* not be in the water.
Attitudes to safety, including all the ones outlined in this thread don't amaze me, largely because I have used almost all of them to justify not wearing a life jacket. But limiting this judgement strictly to myself, I believe that those justifications are to some degree selfish. If there was no-one else in the world, I could do what I like. But for the sake of my family and of those in the rescue services who might be involved in the search for and recovery of my body, I think I should wear a lifejacket and harness, and clip on when leaving the cockpit. (I cannot see any point in purchasing a harness without a lifejacket - the nuisance value is not significantly less.)Attitudes to safety never cease to amaze me. As a former RNLI SEA Checker I can say here that whenever I went aboard other peoples' boats and began the discussion it quickly became apparent that the "wear it when the situation arises" brigade were in fact covering up for their own laziness.