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#2
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"Chuck Gould" wrote in message
oups.com... This was in this morning's email. Presented here as an interesting idea, so the specific contact details for additional information or purchase information have been eliminated from this post. In the unlikely event that somebody would be interested in contacting the firm that makes this device, Email me at and I'll send the contact info via that route: ********* Hi Chuck, Have you heard of or covered a great boatig/water safety device called the Safety Turtle? Must-have for any boater with children and/or pets. Advocated by many boating and water safety organizations, such as the Shuswap Houseboating Association, the YMCA and the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies. It is a device that is worn either around the child's wrist or on their lifevest or around the pet's collar or lifevest and sends a wireless signal to a base station (positioned anywhere on the boat) if the child or pet falls overboard. The base station then alarms loudly so that the adults on board know immediately that there is a child/pet that has fallen overboard and can rush to help. I've included further info below and have hi-res images and samples available for consideration. What do you think? Have a great day! Grant Grant Landis Amicus Public Relations I'd use something like that if I had a little kid on the boat. Not for a dog, though. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I'd use something like that if I had a little kid on the boat. Not for a dog, though. There are a lot of boaters who cruise with dogs and who really pamper them. Empty nesters seem to be the worst. (If it's a bad thing, which it probably is not). I know of several boating couples in their 50's, 60's, and 70's who consider their dog almost as close to heart as one of their own kids, and maybe only a half step behind a grandkid. If they find a market for this thing, don't be surprised if a lot of people hook up their doggy life vests, etc. One of the best attended seminars at the last boat show we had in town here was "How to Cruise with Your Dog". |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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"Chuck Gould" wrote in message
ps.com... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I'd use something like that if I had a little kid on the boat. Not for a dog, though. There are a lot of boaters who cruise with dogs and who really pamper them. Empty nesters seem to be the worst. (If it's a bad thing, which it probably is not). I know of several boating couples in their 50's, 60's, and 70's who consider their dog almost as close to heart as one of their own kids, and maybe only a half step behind a grandkid. If they find a market for this thing, don't be surprised if a lot of people hook up their doggy life vests, etc. One of the best attended seminars at the last boat show we had in town here was "How to Cruise with Your Dog". Oy. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ps.com... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I'd use something like that if I had a little kid on the boat. Not for a dog, though. There are a lot of boaters who cruise with dogs and who really pamper them. Empty nesters seem to be the worst. (If it's a bad thing, which it probably is not). I know of several boating couples in their 50's, 60's, and 70's who consider their dog almost as close to heart as one of their own kids, and maybe only a half step behind a grandkid. If they find a market for this thing, don't be surprised if a lot of people hook up their doggy life vests, etc. One of the best attended seminars at the last boat show we had in town here was "How to Cruise with Your Dog". They sell them for swimming pool safety. When the God Babies were out for daughters wedding this summer, I looked at them, but went for a pool alarm instead. The kid may not be wearing the bracelet when she went outside. Might be great for a boat. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... This was in this morning's email. Presented here as an interesting idea, so the specific contact details for additional information or purchase information have been eliminated from this post. In the unlikely event that somebody would be interested in contacting the firm that makes this device, Email me at and I'll send the contact info via that route: ********* Hi Chuck, snip Grant Chuck, remind me again how this is not SPAM. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() JimH wrote: "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... This was in this morning's email. Presented here as an interesting idea, so the specific contact details for additional information or purchase information have been eliminated from this post. In the unlikely event that somebody would be interested in contacting the firm that makes this device, Email me at and I'll send the contact info via that route: ********* Hi Chuck, snip Grant Chuck, remind me again how this is not SPAM. Gladly: 1) I have no financial interest of any kind in the item described. 2) There is no pricing or commercial contact information included, (in fact, it was deleted), merely a description of a new product. 3) I do have contact information available to anybody interested via email- but I didn't post that here to *avoid* falling into a spam category. Spam is a commercial solicitation in a non-commercial venue. If somebody wants the commercial solicitation, I will put them on the track to get it- but it isn't appearing here. 4) There is no personal endorsement or recommendation that anybody actually purchase one of these for any purpose, merely an invitation to discuss whether such a device by this or some other manufacturer with a similar concept might be a useful safety device. It would be tough to discuss whether or not people consider a new device potentially useful as a safety system without at least describing the device. As I have never seen one in person, I forwarded a description that I received. How about you, Jim? Do you take a dog or young kids out with you when you use your boat? What would you think of a system that could sound an alarm the instant one of them fell overboard? I see one use for this, depending on the range of the transmitter, that isn't addressed in the original description. I hate to see it, but it's a common practice for some boaters to put kids as young as 5 or 6 years old in a PFD and then turn them loose to run around the docks in a marina. They are usually goofing off trying to snag a pile perch with a miniature fishing pole or hauling critters up to the dock with a dip net. Sometimes these kids get several slips away from their own boat and there may or may not actually be somebody on deck keeping a constant eye on them. In such a case, knowing that your kindergartner has fallen off the dock at least somewhere nearby would be better than not knowing until the next 10-15 minute interval when the parents put down their martinis and take a visual check. I could probably post something like "Make sure you shred your bills so the local ID thieves don't profit by skimming your garbage", and it would make a nice follow up to the "crooks jotting down numbers on gift cards" post that appeared here recently, but I try to keep the threads I start in the NG related to boating. But I could be wrong. Anybody besides by good friend in Ohio object to the original post as "spam"? I'm not to stubborn to learn from the errors of my ways and if the majority of the NG feels that a description of a new, boating related product is inappropriate in the NG I won't offer that kind of content in the future. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On 30 Nov 2006 12:07:41 -0800, "Chuck Gould"
wrote: JimH wrote: "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... This was in this morning's email. Presented here as an interesting idea, so the specific contact details for additional information or purchase information have been eliminated from this post. In the unlikely event that somebody would be interested in contacting the firm that makes this device, Email me at and I'll send the contact info via that route: ********* Hi Chuck, snip Grant Chuck, remind me again how this is not SPAM. Gladly: 1) I have no financial interest of any kind in the item described. 2) There is no pricing or commercial contact information included, (in fact, it was deleted), merely a description of a new product. 3) I do have contact information available to anybody interested via email- but I didn't post that here to *avoid* falling into a spam category. Spam is a commercial solicitation in a non-commercial venue. If somebody wants the commercial solicitation, I will put them on the track to get it- but it isn't appearing here. 4) There is no personal endorsement or recommendation that anybody actually purchase one of these for any purpose, merely an invitation to discuss whether such a device by this or some other manufacturer with a similar concept might be a useful safety device. It would be tough to discuss whether or not people consider a new device potentially useful as a safety system without at least describing the device. As I have never seen one in person, I forwarded a description that I received. How about you, Jim? Do you take a dog or young kids out with you when you use your boat? What would you think of a system that could sound an alarm the instant one of them fell overboard? I see one use for this, depending on the range of the transmitter, that isn't addressed in the original description. I hate to see it, but it's a common practice for some boaters to put kids as young as 5 or 6 years old in a PFD and then turn them loose to run around the docks in a marina. They are usually goofing off trying to snag a pile perch with a miniature fishing pole or hauling critters up to the dock with a dip net. Sometimes these kids get several slips away from their own boat and there may or may not actually be somebody on deck keeping a constant eye on them. In such a case, knowing that your kindergartner has fallen off the dock at least somewhere nearby would be better than not knowing until the next 10-15 minute interval when the parents put down their martinis and take a visual check. I could probably post something like "Make sure you shred your bills so the local ID thieves don't profit by skimming your garbage", and it would make a nice follow up to the "crooks jotting down numbers on gift cards" post that appeared here recently, but I try to keep the threads I start in the NG related to boating. But I could be wrong. Anybody besides by good friend in Ohio object to the original post as "spam"? I'm not to stubborn to learn from the errors of my ways and if the majority of the NG feels that a description of a new, boating related product is inappropriate in the NG I won't offer that kind of content in the future. FWIW, I took it as a purely informative post about a new product. Your "good friend in Ohio" is trying hard to become the group a-hole again. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() JohnH wrote: On 30 Nov 2006 12:07:41 -0800, "Chuck Gould" wrote: Your "good friend in Ohio" is trying hard to become the group a-hole again. See how posting spam results in some members here having to start with the name calling Chuck? Sort of like political threads.......eh? BTW: JohnH, no one will take your title away from you. Don't sweat it guy! |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ps.com... JimH wrote: "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... This was in this morning's email. Presented here as an interesting idea, so the specific contact details for additional information or purchase information have been eliminated from this post. In the unlikely event that somebody would be interested in contacting the firm that makes this device, Email me at and I'll send the contact info via that route: ********* Hi Chuck, snip Grant Chuck, remind me again how this is not SPAM. Gladly: 1) I have no financial interest of any kind in the item described. 2) There is no pricing or commercial contact information included, (in fact, it was deleted), merely a description of a new product. 3) I do have contact information available to anybody interested via email- but I didn't post that here to *avoid* falling into a spam category. Spam is a commercial solicitation in a non-commercial venue. If somebody wants the commercial solicitation, I will put them on the track to get it- but it isn't appearing here. 4) There is no personal endorsement or recommendation that anybody actually purchase one of these for any purpose, merely an invitation to discuss whether such a device by this or some other manufacturer with a similar concept might be a useful safety device. 1. You mentioned the manufacturer 2. The manufacturer mentioned the specific product by name 3. You offered to act as a distributor for the manufacturer If it smells like a duck and quacks like a duck........... What you should have said: ====================== "I received an email from my brother in law........ummm....I mean a manufacturer of a safety product for boaters and would like your opinions on it. The company manufactures a device that is worn either around the child's wrist or on their lifevest or around the pet's collar or lifevest and sends a wireless signal to a base station (positioned anywhere on the boat) if the child or pet falls overboard. The base station then alarms loudly so that the adults on board know immediately that there is a child/pet that has fallen overboard and can rush to help." What do you think? ============================ Personally I think that anyone who leaves a child unsupervised around water, even for a minute, is insane. |
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