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Joe wrote:
katy wrote: Joe wrote: katy wrote: That's good to hear. I am always concerned, though, when newbies read posts in this forum and see that some experienced sailors eschew safety procedures over comfort or sea conditions. I'm not eschewing safety at all. I figure if something happens I will be more usefull in the water being able to swim and dive. Helping people tangled below is a real factor on a sailboat. Comfort is not my issue either. Float coats are very comfortable. Mobility and not getting tangled up in stuff is my issue. While there is a factor that experience is a safety factor in itself, there are those unforeseeable situations when experience doesn't count at all. We've all read the accounts of famous sailors who have gone to Davy Jones because they weren't wearing a PFD and were swept overboard. Yelp, you wanna play the game you might have to pay the price. Best to stay on the boat. I can give an example of how not having a life jacket kept me alive. I've told the story here before of being washed over in the gulf. Seas at 11-15 ft and I went under the boat. Had I had a life jacket on when the boat came down on me several times, I would have been hammered and cut up worse by the bottom growth, since I did not I just flowed with the action and was able to claw my way out from under the boat. I would not endorse or suggest that anyone else follow my example, but I'm not going to change my ways. Joe Yet if you had on a harness and line you would not have been in that situation. It's the same argument that people use about seatbelts. Had I had a harness on, I'd been snapped at the harness like a twig, or crushed by the deck cargo awash, and not able to do my job. Picture standing on a steel beach, around you is 10X15 ft metal boxes that wiegh in on average 2000 pounds. Now violently rock the beach 25 to 35 degrees, back and forth, then have a 15 ft solid wall of water hit you and all the gear, breaking 3/8 chains everywhere and washing it to all in one big slosh to stbd in 1/2 a second and tell me you want to be harnessed in. Joe OK...you've qualified that you were not sailing but on some kind of commercial or Navy vessel, which is an entirely different matter...most people here would never be in that situation so what you're saying doesn't apply...hey...just a thought...why don't you ask Terry to come back and post? I promise I won't pick on her...for real...since Haggie's immersed in other projects lately it's rahter devoid of the female perspective around here (I don't consider "Ellen's" perspective as being female)...and the guys all like her... |
#2
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![]() katy wrote: Joe wrote: katy wrote: Joe wrote: katy wrote: That's good to hear. I am always concerned, though, when newbies read posts in this forum and see that some experienced sailors eschew safety procedures over comfort or sea conditions. I'm not eschewing safety at all. I figure if something happens I will be more usefull in the water being able to swim and dive. Helping people tangled below is a real factor on a sailboat. Comfort is not my issue either. Float coats are very comfortable. Mobility and not getting tangled up in stuff is my issue. While there is a factor that experience is a safety factor in itself, there are those unforeseeable situations when experience doesn't count at all. We've all read the accounts of famous sailors who have gone to Davy Jones because they weren't wearing a PFD and were swept overboard. Yelp, you wanna play the game you might have to pay the price. Best to stay on the boat. I can give an example of how not having a life jacket kept me alive. I've told the story here before of being washed over in the gulf. Seas at 11-15 ft and I went under the boat. Had I had a life jacket on when the boat came down on me several times, I would have been hammered and cut up worse by the bottom growth, since I did not I just flowed with the action and was able to claw my way out from under the boat. I would not endorse or suggest that anyone else follow my example, but I'm not going to change my ways. Joe Yet if you had on a harness and line you would not have been in that situation. It's the same argument that people use about seatbelts. Had I had a harness on, I'd been snapped at the harness like a twig, or crushed by the deck cargo awash, and not able to do my job. Picture standing on a steel beach, around you is 10X15 ft metal boxes that wiegh in on average 2000 pounds. Now violently rock the beach 25 to 35 degrees, back and forth, then have a 15 ft solid wall of water hit you and all the gear, breaking 3/8 chains everywhere and washing it to all in one big slosh to stbd in 1/2 a second and tell me you want to be harnessed in. Joe OK...you've qualified that you were not sailing but on some kind of commercial or Navy vessel, which is an entirely different matter...most people here would never be in that situation so what you're saying doesn't apply...hey...just a thought...why don't you ask Terry to come back and post? I promise I won't pick on her...for real...since Haggie's immersed in other projects lately it's rahter devoid of the female perspective around here (I don't consider "Ellen's" perspective as being female)...and the guys all like her... She's busy..... Medical School..Top of her class. Joe |
#3
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Joe wrote:
katy wrote: Joe wrote: katy wrote: Joe wrote: katy wrote: That's good to hear. I am always concerned, though, when newbies read posts in this forum and see that some experienced sailors eschew safety procedures over comfort or sea conditions. I'm not eschewing safety at all. I figure if something happens I will be more usefull in the water being able to swim and dive. Helping people tangled below is a real factor on a sailboat. Comfort is not my issue either. Float coats are very comfortable. Mobility and not getting tangled up in stuff is my issue. While there is a factor that experience is a safety factor in itself, there are those unforeseeable situations when experience doesn't count at all. We've all read the accounts of famous sailors who have gone to Davy Jones because they weren't wearing a PFD and were swept overboard. Yelp, you wanna play the game you might have to pay the price. Best to stay on the boat. I can give an example of how not having a life jacket kept me alive. I've told the story here before of being washed over in the gulf. Seas at 11-15 ft and I went under the boat. Had I had a life jacket on when the boat came down on me several times, I would have been hammered and cut up worse by the bottom growth, since I did not I just flowed with the action and was able to claw my way out from under the boat. I would not endorse or suggest that anyone else follow my example, but I'm not going to change my ways. Joe Yet if you had on a harness and line you would not have been in that situation. It's the same argument that people use about seatbelts. Had I had a harness on, I'd been snapped at the harness like a twig, or crushed by the deck cargo awash, and not able to do my job. Picture standing on a steel beach, around you is 10X15 ft metal boxes that wiegh in on average 2000 pounds. Now violently rock the beach 25 to 35 degrees, back and forth, then have a 15 ft solid wall of water hit you and all the gear, breaking 3/8 chains everywhere and washing it to all in one big slosh to stbd in 1/2 a second and tell me you want to be harnessed in. Joe OK...you've qualified that you were not sailing but on some kind of commercial or Navy vessel, which is an entirely different matter...most people here would never be in that situation so what you're saying doesn't apply...hey...just a thought...why don't you ask Terry to come back and post? I promise I won't pick on her...for real...since Haggie's immersed in other projects lately it's rahter devoid of the female perspective around here (I don't consider "Ellen's" perspective as being female)...and the guys all like her... She's busy..... Medical School..Top of her class. Joe No comment.... |
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