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Ken wrote:
I too am a large person and worried about an open water re-entry. I'm very interested in your experience. I assume that by "large", you mean that you have a lot of body fat. Assuming that's the case, you need to use the buoyancy that it creates to your advantage. The biggest problem I see when people are having trouble with self rescues is that they try to come straight out of the water vertically, which simply doesn't work. The heavier you are, the more weight you have to try to lift and the more difficult it is to haul yourself up. Stirrups and similar gimmicks encourage this poor technique. They're also a great way to break a paddle and create an entanglement hazard. The key to self rescue is to float yourself to the surface face down (lying in the water on your belly) with your legs on the surface, then slide yourself up and across the aft deck of your boat. Perhaps a better way to look at it is that you're pushing the boat down and pulling it under you. This uses your natural buoyancy to keep you on the surface and your weight to push the boat down. A boat with a low aft deck really helps, though most boats sized for larger people tend to have high decks, which compounds the problems of re-entry. One thing that can help with a high decked boat is to flood the cockpit to get the boat lower in the water. I'm not fond of this technique, since it requires more pumping out afterward, but it's preferable to not being able to re-enter the boat. -- Regards Brian |
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