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!Jones wrote:
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 08:11:25 -0400, in rec.boats.paddle Steve Cramer wrote: 1. Get some training. It's unclear if you are new kayakers or only a new tandem team, but you should learn to deal with wind and waves in a safe location that doesn't require Coasties. 2. Pay better attention to conditions 3. Don't go out as a single boat. Thank you for the lecture. Don't mention it. Comes with your Usenet subscription. No extra charge. 1. It was a Coast Guard sopnsored training session held with a lifeboat standing by. You might have mentioned that. Were you the designated crash test dummy? 2. The conditions were pretty generic to the area in which we live: 20 knot wind, 4' chop on a 9 second period. No fun, these, but, if you plan to paddle hereabouts, you'd better be able to deal with that. Indeed. Are you able to? If not, find some more sheltered areas until you are. 3. When you end up in the laundry, another kayak isn't much help, IMO. I had other boats all around me. Then why did the Coast Guard have to be involved. Oh, right, they were training and needed the practice. Will you always paddle in CG practice zones? If not, .... But, seriously, when you're flipped by a wave, are you *really* thinking about getting some training? Of course not, that's why you should be thinking of it NOW. Might have been nice to think about it beforehand, but that's water under the, um, kayak. Can one really learn how to handle a kayak in adverse conditions by reading some books on the subject? No. .... by getting advice from experts? No. We chose that spot and those conditions because we thought they'd be challenging; however, they would not life threatening. (Although, about my third time through the rinse cycle, I wasn't so sure about that.) Just asking, had you ever tried to do an unassisted tandem re-entry in 4' waves? In flat water? We were not able to right the boat and remount. Our spotters gave us time, then came in and fished us out. On reflection, I think that a drag device might have helped... *that* was the meat of the question. *I* couldn't orient the nose-high tandem boat and get back to my stoker. ( And I believe I said that one should avoid that situation.) Oci-1 has given an excellent set of advice on how to deal with your problem. Of course, he was sitting at a keyboard and had time to think about it. If you had had some previous rescue training, it might have been an automatic response on your part. Now, an unsolicited lectu If you don't wish to fight incessant flame wars, then refrain from giving out unsolicited lectures. While what you say is perfectly valid and nobody in their right mind would argue otherwise, it comes across as pedantic and patronizing. I'm sorry if you found my suggestions pedantic ( I am, after all, a college professor) and patronizing. Here's the point I was trying to make, and if you spend any time here you'll see it made repeatedly: more gear does not keep/get you out of trouble. Training leading to a stronger skills base does. I *love* to fight flame wars, personally; however, I'm not seeking one at the moment... I'm *still* sore from my Monday evening pasting in the chop. I would suggest that no training session in the world matches a good laundering for impressing one just how powerful the waves are!!! If you *love* flame wars, please find another ng. Telling people what you think about the behavior they voluntarily placed in front of the world is not flaming, it's what newsgroups do. It's nice to be impressed. But you don't learn much under those conditions. Paddle safe. -- Steve Cramer Athens, GA |
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