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Mighty intellegent reply there bud.
"JAXAshby" wrote in message ... Double BOO!! Right, a time and place, and at night and offshore is a place for attachment. No one said any thing about a person in the cockpit, only going forward in the dark. When we started this point, jax said nothing about calm weather either. Have you slipped at the dock? Don't tell me there haven't been times when you have grabbed a shroud or stay to catch your self, even in calm weather, say catching another boat's wake, perhaps one you didn't see? I was just reading an article in lattitudes and Attitudes on rogue waves, they can come at any time. OzOne wrote in message ... On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 00:58:38 -0500, "The Carrolls" scribbled thusly: If you are trying to tell me that offshore and at night foreward with no attachment to the boat is a safe practice reguardless of sea conditions, you are fool hardy. I don't always use a lifejacket when sailing, but I will never tell any one that is a safe practice(no jacket). I am a tinsmith, I work setting decking on high steel buildings, I am certianly able to walk things such as a boat deck with out falling, most of the time, I have slipped in bothbuilding steel and boat decks. Accidents and unforseen circumstances happen. yes, I have been foreward too at night with no attachment or jacket, BUT, I would never call it a safe practice on a small vessel underway. Drop into the calm and come up under that small swell dropping the boat, on your head. Hit something unseen in the water, either with the boat or your head, and you have a problem. We have no business telling a new person to our sport that it is a practice they should be comefortable with, let them find out for themselves. Yep, offshore forward in calm conditions at night is perfectly safe provided you don't have sleepy heads in the cockpit. Honestly the chances are much better that you'll be hit by a London bus in NYC crossing the road under a full moon. I'd never say it's 100% safe, nothing is. I've had two harnesses fail in heavy weather when I've dropped off and am very very lucky to be alive. I don't put the faith in them that many do and use the same caution with and without. We wear lifejackets in the Etchells when racing in moderate breeze and my bow uses a harness when it gets real big. I wouldn't ever dismiss the extra safety of a harness but there is a time and place for everything. Oz1...of the 3 twins. I welcome you to crackerbox palace,We've been expecting you. |
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