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#1
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I don't want to start an argument here but when you take the topic of a PFD
it is design in the case of an emergency to keep the vital part of your body the head a float you can look at what if and different situations but to me it is a good safety plan if you are sea kayaking and the surf keeps pounding you under it will bring you back up. Canoeing it allows you to stay a float in rapids to try and guide your way through if you dump and so on it is a useful tool one for all intensive purposes makes sense but it is your choice. All I am saying is it makes sense to use every safety feature made available for this sport no reflection on seatbelt or helmets and chances of things happening. Watersports are characterized by the danger of many things but perhaps the most prominent is getting a lung full of water. When a person chooses to take a course of action such as forgoing a safety measure then that person should realize they choose to take responsibility. By the way it is mandatory in Canada to have a PFD for each person, a throw bag, baling device, a sound signaling device and a visual signaling device. -- Abe Elias Diving Sparrow Paddle Co, http://home.cogeco.ca/~aelias |
#2
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![]() Canranger44 wrote: By the way it is mandatory in Canada to have a PFD for each person, a throw bag, baling device, a sound signaling device and a visual signaling device. Yes, you'll have to carry one (pfd , approved by CCG or DOT) for each person on board, wearing it is up to you. Common sense tells that it is a good idea to wear it, since stuffed in a hatch or under the deck lines it is no good. Reality shows a different picture. Espcl. in spring and early summer, the first warm days, you see a lot of people paddling the lakes and the coast not wearing pfd. Warm air and water temperature 10 C are a potentially deadly combination, since they lure people into ignoring the risk of cold shock and possible hypothermia after immersion . What are your chances if you get dumped into water like this to make a speedy recovery? Well, the people who know those tricks and techniques usually wear pfd and wetsuits, because they know the risks. What are your chances to hold on to paddle and boat, pull out the pfd, put it on and go from there? Good chance that coldshock (not hypothermia) will take care of that problem for you. I hate to say this, but increasing popularity of kayaking and the increasing number of beginners and unknowing "intermediate" role models will cause more fatalities in the near future. More and more people go on the water and have no idea what they are getting into. Needless to say that I will not be disappointed to see myself proven wrong, but I am afraid I this will not happen. The study mentioned before shows a larger number of canoeing fatalities than kayaking fatalities. The only reason for this is that canoeing is still much more common in cottage country than kayaking. The increasing number of recreational kayaks will likely shift the numbers in near future. In case it hasn't been mentioned befo the study was published by the American Canoe Association (ACA) under the title "Critical Judgement". Last time I checked it was on their website as a pdf file (http://www.acanet.org/sei-critical-judge.htm) Ulli On a trail in the alps there was a sign " Responsible hikers don't leave the trail, all others are required by law to do so" |
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NTSB, August 25, "Mandatory" PFD | General |