Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The real problem with all of these courses is they don't really teach anyone
how to operate a boat. Well, FWIW it seems that way to me, too, but this begs the question "how does anybody ever learn to operate a boat then?" Gould 0738 wrote: I very much agree. However, there are a few things that are so fundamental that one needs to know them before even attempting to learn to operate a boat. No course is ever going to instill a basic familiarity with the laws of physics and some common sense. When you learned to drive a car, odds are you understood what a Stop sign was and what red, yellow, and green traffic signals meant before you hit the road. That's sort of how I view these boater education courses. They aren't enough to turn a rookie into any sort of a boater, but they might prevent a few disasters caused by the absolutely and totally clueless exercising their perceived "right" to boat in ignorance. The main thing these courses need to drive into the skulls of newbie boaters is 1- It's easier to screw up than you think 2- if you screw up, it will probably hurt. A lot. 2- if you hurt somebody else or damage their boat, they get to break all your leg & ankle bones. Slowly. And it will definitely hurt. A lot. It's not quite down to the one sentence minimum, but it covers all the bases nicely. Fair Skies Doug King |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Boater wannabe questions (Pacific Northwest area) | General | |||
Help for new boater | ASA | |||
State boater licensing | General | |||
Yet another brilliant boater at Ponce Inlet nearly gets KO'd. | General | |||
Boater Beware - Seattle Lake Union | General |