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![]() jps wrote: Woman Drowns While 'Teak Surfing' On Lake Tapps August 22, 2005 By KOMO Staff & News Services SUMNER, WASH. - A 22-year-old woman drowned after going boating with friends on Lake Tapps, officials said. The Pierce County Medical Examiner's Office identified the woman Monday morning as Jenda Jones, of Sumner. She was pronounced dead Saturday evening after she was found by Pierce County sheriff's deputies in the Tacoma Point area and rushed to Good Samaritan Hospital in Puyallup. Jones and another woman were "teak surfing," hanging onto the shelf at the stern of a boat as the motor was running at a slow speed, when she let go and slipped beneath the surface, sheriff's Sgt. Jerry R. Bates said. She apparently was the water 30 to 40 minutes before she was found and was not wearing a life vest, Bates added. Past cases of teak surfing have resulted in injury or death when riders fall unconscious after breathing carbon monoxide from a boat's motor. Investigators are awaiting toxicology results to determine whether carbon monoxide was a factor in Saturday's drowning. Comment on this accident from the Coast Guard: Office of Public Affairs U.S. Coast Guard Thirteenth District Boating Safety Alert Date: August 22, 2005 Contact: Dan Shipman 206-220-7257 COAST GUARD, MARINE LAW ENFORCMENT AGENCIES STRONGLY DISCOURAGE "TEAK SURFING" SEATTLE - A 22-year old woman was killed Saturday while "teak surfing" or "platform dragging" on Lake Tapps, Washington. This accident has all indications of a Carbon Monoxide-related fatality. Teak surfing, also called platform dragging, occurs when a passenger hangs onto the rear of a boat to be pulled through the water until the boat's wake builds enough height to allow body surfing. This pratice is extremely dangerous becuase surfers are within inches of the boat's propellers and the vessel's exhaust ports. Surfers typically do not wear lifejackets when engaged in the practice. National studies have found Carbon Monoxide concentrations at a small vessel's stern swim steps to be as high as 40-to 80-thousand parts per million. Concentrations as low as 200 parts per million can be fatal. Anyone exposed to a high concentrations of Carbon Monoxide will lose consciousness in a matter of minutes if not seconds. If a teak surfer has become incapacitated they could slip below the water. The Coast Guard and other marine law enforcement agencies would like to remind people of the dangers associated with teak surfing. For more information contact your local marine law enforcement agency, state boating authority, Coast Guard or U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. Carbon Monoxide information web link: http://www.uscgboating.org/command/co.htm ### |
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