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Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Hello. I hope these following questions dont appear to be rather silly,
but, I feel i need to ask them out of concern for my safety when Kayaking on a lake . I just bought a new Sea Eagle 330 Inflatable Kayak and am ready to take it out on some lakes . Theres one particular Island that id like to paddle to which is perhaps a 1/4 mile from shore. There are motorboats on this lake although it never appears too busy. Questions are : 1. Will an 11' Kayak that is approx. 30" wide , off white and blue in color, be readily seen if a boat and kayak are heading head-on toward one another.? 2. What is a safe margin of distance i should expect a boater to take to my kayak, when out on the lake ? 3. * Are there many Boat/Kayak accidents on lakes generally ? 4. What measures should i take if a Boat is coming fast toward me and apparently doesnt see me ? Stand up and wave a paddle ? Thanks, Dave |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Hi Dave,
There are no silly questions seriously asked. The problem with little motorboats is that the only thing required to get one and drive it is a credit rating. There are laws that include rules of the road and some standards for courtesy and the safety of others. Many boaters carefully abide these, and a few others scrupulously ignore all of the above. The rest of the answers are in line (I don't like this - but it works) and I will include both ends of the scale. Dave in Lake Villa wrote: Hello. I hope these following questions don't appear to be rather silly, but, I feel i need to ask them out of concern for my safety when Kayaking on a lake . I just bought a new Sea Eagle 330 Inflatable Kayak and am ready to take it out on some lakes . Theres one particular Island that id like to paddle to which is perhaps a 1/4 mile from shore. There are motorboats on this lake although it never appears too busy. Questions are : 1. Will an 11' Kayak that is approx. 30" wide , off white and blue in color, be readily seen if a boat and kayak are heading head-on toward one another? Your kayak should be very visible. It is the responsibility of every operator to know what is in his intended track. See below 2. What is a safe margin of distance i should expect a boater to take to my kayak, when out on the lake ? This will be largely dependent on his speed and wake. Don't expect anything. Most will courteous and others will be AH. Operators are responsible for the damage done by the wake they create (very old Law). Law eforcement of this issue is lax at the very best. 3. Are there many Boat/Kayak accidents on lakes generally ? In a word, NO. Do not count on that to protect you. Wear a comfortable PFD. 4. What measures should i take if a Boat is coming fast toward me and apparently doesn't see me ? Stand up and wave a paddle ? Stand Up? - I don't think so... Wave a paddle - Yes, but if he isn't watching or is OUI that won't make much difference. Be ready to spin the kayak to bow on. This is not to present a smaller target, but to allow the boat to do its best to escape damage and protect you. You do know, that if motorboats had not been invented then there would have been no reason to create canned beer. (IMHO) Thanks, Dave Enjoy the paddle. Matt Colie |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
'Be ready to spin the kayak to bow on. This is not to present a smaller
target, but to allow the boat to do its best to escape damage and protect you.' REPLY: Thanks Matt. Dont i want to turn the kayak so the broadside is toward the approaching boat so he can see it more readily and hopefully turn (yet still be prepared to jump off ) ? |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Hello
On Sun, 9 Sep 2007 14:53:44 -0500, (Dave in Lake Villa) wrote: 'Be ready to spin the kayak to bow on. This is not to present a smaller target, but to allow the boat to do its best to escape damage and protect you.' REPLY: Thanks Matt. Dont i want to turn the kayak so the broadside is toward the approaching boat so he can see it more readily and hopefully turn (yet still be prepared to jump off ) ? I was thinking more of bows on, so that if he misses you the kayak can ride over the wake more easily. Also think being bows on in a collision would protect you more. :-) My Website: http://gannetweb.awardspace.com Delete the You Know What to email me! |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Ok ...then its bows on.
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Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Dave in Lake Villa wrote:
'Be ready to spin the kayak to bow on. This is not to present a smaller target, but to allow the boat to do its best to escape damage and protect you.' REPLY: Thanks Matt. Don't i want to turn the kayak so the broadside is toward the approaching boat so he can see it more readily and hopefully turn (yet still be prepared to jump off ) ? Dave, Jumping off is really not an option (just for grins - try it sometime - you can't get very far). If the motorboat is on a collision course and has shown no correction, keep waving a paddle but assume he will not change course. Many of the small boat operators do not have a very good understanding of what the boats maneuvering capabilities actually are. Many strike things because the literally don't know how to not. Be mindful of how long it will take you to get bow on and how you can do it best. I found that backwater on the close side with a sweeping stoke worked best for the boats I have had, but find what you are most capable and comfortable at completing. Practicing this is not stupid. My kayaks never had a rudder. (There are some out there that actually take aim at small paddle and sailboats with the intent of making the miss as close as possible.) As Anthony said, bow on will allow the kayak to manage the wake best and put more boat between you and the oncoming. When the oncoming is close, it will be up to you to decide when is too close. This is why you need to know how best to swing and how long it will take. The motorboat operator will probably think you are over reacting, but it is not his life he is risking. Many jet-ski, PWC or whatever have very little understanding of anything and many not be aware that if they shut the power down they then have no directional control at all and it may take a good distance to slow or stop the craft. Remember that the number of people that was cause such problems is small, just the problems that they create are large. Enjoy, Matt Colie Lifelong Waterman, Licensed Mariner |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
"Dave in Lake Villa" wrote...
1. Will an 11' Kayak that is approx. 30" wide , off white and blue in color, be readily seen if a boat and kayak are heading head-on toward one another.? In most cases, yes. However, sun angle, waves, and movement all play a part. That is assuming the other boaters are LOOKING for other traffic... The most visible part of a kayak is the moving paddle blades as you are paddling normally. If your blades are not white or other bright/light color, add some wide strips of white/silver reflective tape to them. They flash nicely in the sun. 2. What is a safe margin of distance i should expect a boater to take to my kayak, when out on the lake ? If he's going slowly, maybe as little as a couple boat widths. If fast, maybe 50'. Remember the rule: "Constant bearing, decreasing range" means you are on a collision course. If the other boat is moving from side to side, you will miss. 3. Are there many Boat/Kayak accidents on lakes generally ? No. My "home waters" include seaplanes in addition to the usual mix of jetskis, water skiers, fishermen, etc. There are very few actual collisions (though I do have a close friend whose dinghy was literally cut in half by a power cruiser a couple years ago -- the guy "just didn't see" him!). 4. What measures should i take if a Boat is coming fast toward me and apparently doesnt see me ? Stand up and wave a paddle ? Standing up is NOT a good idea. You may fall overboard and become even LESS visible to him. Waving the paddle is a reasonable first option (don't forget the reflective tape if it's a dark color). Make sure you have a LOUD whistle attached to your PFD, and it is readily available for use. In crowded waters, I often take mine off the PFD and hold it in my lips, ready to blow IMMEDIATELY. Finally, you must (by law) be predictable unless collision is imminent. When you have the right of way, you are the "stand on" vessel in Coast Guard lingo. Maintain your course and speed as much as possible. Watch for the other boat to make an obvious move to avoid you (remember the "constant bearing, decreasing range" rule). If none of that works, and it looks like you will hit, paddle as quickly as possible out of the way. Make the smallest possible target of yourself: head-on or stern-to; that way, you may only get a glancing blow and capsize, rather than a "T-bone" collision. I would prefer head-on, because the visibility is better, and your additional speed will not make that much difference in the end. |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Thank you Matt and John. I am planning on carrying my .38 special
caliber Revolver with me when i Kayak, so, im wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) . My Kayak Paddles are black so, ill add the reflective tape as suggested. Dave. |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
"Dave in Lake Villa" wrote...
I am planning on carrying my .38 special caliber Revolver with me when i Kayak, so, im wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) . Absolutely NOT!!! What you need is under Paddle Craft, about half way down the left side of this page -- http://www.tsca.net/Scottish.html -- in a very nice shade of baby blue. It's also another reason for the head-on collision mitigation method... |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
I Love it.
John Weiss wrote: "Dave in Lake Villa" wrote... I am planning on carrying my .38 special caliber Revolver with me when I Kayak, so, I'm wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) . Absolutely NOT!!! John, Are saying that the .38 will not be heard or that it is not big enough? What you need is under Paddle Craft, about half way down the left side of this page -- http://www.tsca.net/Scottish.html -- in a very nice shade of baby blue. It's also another reason for the head-on collision mitigation method... I had heard of gun punts, but I was not aware of a surviving example. Dave, This is why all of my handguns are stainless. remember that most of the small boats in use are fiberglass and all the newer ones have floation. But, if you can get a couple of holes in the bow, below the rest waterline, the boat won't sink until it stops. This way, the passengers will not be at little risk but the boat will probably be out of commission for a significant period. (Gawd- aren't we mean...) Matt Colie |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
"Matt Colie" wrote...
I am planning on carrying my .38 special caliber Revolver with me when I Kayak, so, I'm wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) . Absolutely NOT!!! Are saying that the .38 will not be heard or that it is not big enough? Not big enough. My favorite is a Mossberg 500 Mariner, though it might be awkward in an inflatable... I had heard of gun punts, but I was not aware of a surviving example. This is why all of my handguns are stainless. S&W 686, S&W 569, M500 Mariner... :-) |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
'The gun punt Maalesh II was built in 1939.
Gun punts were designed for hunting wildfowl in shallow water, mud, and reed beds. Both paddles and sails were fitted. The large gun was fired by pull-cord after aiming, and its recoil would push the boat backward at significant speed. ' REPLY: John.... BOY, that is one mean lookin' gun ! Dang...its nearly the length of my kayak . Id be afraid of the recoil knocking me overboard . Matt .... I dont think id take aim at anothers Boat UNLESS he was purposely trying to do me in ... and then id have to be very certain about it such as him circling around for another strike. If i get into a scenario where a Boat is coming and he doesnt see me in my kayak, I think i shall immediatly unclip my Life Jacket and dive deep . A couple years ago on a lake nearby , the Mayor of a small town was in the water swimming in the middle of the lake and went underwater for a bit ; when he came to the surface , his head hit the spinning propeller of a Boat that was passing over him right at that moment. Killed him instantly and not a pretty sight im sure. Hope i have far better luck in my sitting-duck Kayak. Dave |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
On Sep 10, 1:46 pm, (Dave in Lake Villa)
wrote: Thank you Matt and John. I am planning on carrying my .38 special caliber Revolver with me when i Kayak, so, im wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) . My Kayak Paddles are black so, ill add the reflective tape as suggested. Dave. OH BOY Big Man with a Gun You REALLY are a ****ing idiot Try a flare, ya paranoid nitwit Hal |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Thank you Matt and John. * I am planning on carrying my .38 special
caliber Revolver with me when i Kayak, so, * im wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) * . My Kayak Paddles are black so, ill add the reflective tape as suggested. Dave. "OH BOY Big Man with a Gun You REALLY are a ****ing idiot Try a flare, ya paranoid nitwit Hal" REPLY: Its uncivil folks like yourself Hal that there are Laws which allow people to arm themselves ; you never know when a person who has an anger problem will suddenly escalate into full blown Wacko and take his anger out on you. I dont play the 'Big Man with a Gun' stereotype --- but i have no reservation about having protection given this culture of lowlifes. Regards. |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
On Sep 12, 6:14 pm, (Dave in Lake Villa)
wrote: Thank you Matt and John. I am planning on carrying my .38 special caliber Revolver with me when i Kayak, so, im wondering if gunshots can be heard by the Boater over his boats noise (?) . My Kayak Paddles are black so, ill add the reflective tape as suggested. Dave. "OH BOY Big Man with a Gun You REALLY are a ****ing idiot Try a flare, ya paranoid nitwit Hal" REPLY: Its uncivil folks like yourself Hal that there are Laws which allow people to arm themselves ; you never know when a person who has an anger problem will suddenly escalate into full blown Wacko and take his anger out on you. I dont play the 'Big Man with a Gun' stereotype --- but i have no reservation about having protection given this culture of lowlifes. Regards. And it's because of gun toting paranoid whack jobs like you that there are Laws passed making permits to carry concealable weapons difficult to obtain. I can just see you before some local judge saying that you don't need to obey a state's laws because you only obey a higher authority. Be sure to mention that to Bruno Buggerman, your cell mate. Remenber that local cops love to trounce on out of state vehicles. They may even want to search it (and you) for contraband Hal, who has very little regard 4U |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Hal wrote:
And it's because of gun toting paranoid whack jobs like you that there are Laws passed making permits to carry concealable weapons difficult to obtain. I can just see you before some local judge saying that you don't need to obey a state's laws because you only obey a higher authority. Be sure to mention that to Bruno Buggerman, your cell mate. Remenber that local cops love to trounce on out of state vehicles. They may even want to search it (and you) for contraband Hal, who has very little regard 4U Hal(9000?) The amount you know about the situation of which you write is truly awesome. Did you ever try to get the attention of a small boat operator? Excuse me please, but I fail to see what a kayaker trying to protect his life has to do with what might be contraband in other states. That you are one of the problems that those of us that would like to peacefully share the water have on a regular basis is what I am beginning to understand by you statements. You probably have a 16ft Clorox bottle with way too much engine and can not understand why he should not be allowed to do what he wishes when he wishes with little regard for the safety of other persons. Sorry to make your acquaintance. Matt Colie - Lifelong Waterman and Licensed (as in USCG) Mariner |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Dave in Lake Villa wrote thusly:
.... I dont think id take aim at anothers Boat UNLESS he was purposely trying to do me in ... and then id have to be very certain about it such as him circling around for another strike. If i get into a scenario where a Boat is coming and he doesnt see me in my kayak, I think i shall immediatly unclip my Life Jacket and dive deep . Some (many) years ago when I lived in Key West I was driving by the harbor when I spotted a speedboat rounding up and heading right for a big old wooden cruising powerboat. The owner of the cruiser had just come up from working on the engine and bent back to reach for his beer when the speedboat launched into the side of his boat - sliding right past the cruising boat's owner by what looked like an inch. The speedboat went clean thru the side of the wooden boat up under the gunwhale and came to rest in the cockpit completely out of the water. The guy in the speedboat just sat there dumbfounded. The owner of the wood boat looked like he just saw God. He kept looking at the beer in his hand, then at the speedboat up against his belly, then back at the beer... Reaching for that beer saved that guy's life. A few of us stopped to help pull the boat over to the seawall and hold it there until the cops came. Took a bunch of pics, wish I could post them but they are in film. Red |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
On Sep 14, 8:26 am, Matt Colie wrote:
That you are one of the problems that those of us that would like to peacefully share the water have on a regular basis is what I am beginning to understand by you statements. You probably have a 16ft Clorox bottle with way too much engine and can not understand why he should not be allowed to do what he wishes when he wishes with little regard for the safety of other persons. Sorry to make your acquaintance. Matt Colie - Lifelong Waterman and Licensed (as in USCG) Mariner (Who give a S**T!) "little regard for the safety of other persons", you say? But, of course, you would NEVER consider yourself a complete numbskull for advocating taking random pot shots at other boaters to whom you're taken a dislike. Another POS "Big Man with a Gun" with the "I'm so much better than everyone" attitude, just like the original paranoid whack job here, DILV Hal |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Hal wrote: On Sep 14, 8:26 am, Matt Colie wrote: That you are one of the problems that those of us that would like to peacefully share the water have on a regular basis is what I am beginning to understand by you statements. You probably have a 16ft Clorox bottle with way too much engine and can not understand why he should not be allowed to do what he wishes when he wishes with little regard for the safety of other persons. Sorry to make your acquaintance. Matt Colie - Lifelong Waterman and Licensed (as in USCG) Mariner (Who give a S**T!) "little regard for the safety of other persons", you say? But, of course, you would NEVER consider yourself a complete numbskull for advocating taking random pot shots at other boaters to whom you're taken a dislike. Another POS "Big Man with a Gun" with the "I'm so much better than everyone" attitude, just like the original paranoid whack job here, DILV Hal Hal, I suppose I should thank you for presenting my case, but you so obviously don't understand the situation at all that it is a completely lost cause and you will miss the point yet again. Thank You for demonstrating exactly the level of personal responsibility and consideration that makes the situation what it is. You could not have read the thread or you would not be writing as you are. You are trying to defend the individuals either trying to kill another person on the water just because he has a small quiet boat or is just to stinking drunk to even understand the damage he is about to do. Possibly, I should post a review of the thread and highlight just how stupid your remarks and responses have actually been, but again, I am so sure that the actual case would be lost to you. Come back and discuss more this after you have spent a day either as first responder at one of these incidents or maybe just one pleasant afternoon as a member of the recovery team diving in search of the bodies of the victims of a boater such as you seem to support. There has never been anyplace that I have been where there was effective law enforcement on the water. Please don't tell me to leave it to them. That will start another set of really dreadful stories I have accumulated in years of cleaning up after people such as yourself. Thank you your opinion. Matt Colie |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Matt Colie wrote:
Hal wrote: much snippage There has never been anyplace that I have been where there was effective law enforcement on the water. Please don't tell me to leave it to them. That will start another set of really dreadful stories I have accumulated in years of cleaning up after people such as yourself. Thank you your opinion. Have you followed the Clearlake incidence in California? Latitude 38 has been good in their coverage and presentation of the two sides. Most of it seems to be in the form of letters to the editor, the following http://www.latitude38.com/letters/200708.html about 1/3 of the way down is the pertinent letter/response. I mention it to illustrate what I see as a certain level of bias on the part of authorities. For instance eye witnesses were told their testimony was not needed. This included at least two people that one saw the sailboats running lights on and another who said the saloon lights were on. This is apparently an effort to support the Deputy's version of events where he says the boat was unlit. While I don't agree with Hal's reaction to your going armed, you might want to think about it since there is a presumed guilty against you by a large segment of the population if you are armed. Yes there are Yahoos that would think it funny to try and swamp you with their wake or otherwise ruin your boating experience. Thing is they succeed in drowning you, the presence of a gun on your carcase would just make people think "He was probably a crack dealer" or something equivalent. There are laws against brandishing a gun so the ability to do what you think you can do is dubious. That is, jail time for you vs. a ticket for the person who precipitated the incident. Unless you are in your own home, you may have the "duty to retreat" in your state. This means if someone is harassing you, you have to leave the area. I'm as serious as a broken leg about this, you have to leave or you will be charged with a crime. Carry a camera, flare gun, and pepper spray. If you are in an area that doesn't allow excessive wakes or speed, the sight of a camera taking their picture should be enough to deter knucleheads. If you do carry a gun, don't bring it out unless someone is threatening you with deadly force. |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
John Weiss wrote:
Personally, I have yet to encounter a situation in my kayak where I needed anything more than a whistle, though I have considered adding a signal mirror to attract the attention of landing seaplane pilots. John, With the perspective of a former airplane pilot, I will urge you to be very careful if you choose to use a mirror to reflect the sun into the eyes of a landing seaplane pilot. It is hard enough to see clearly through a spinning propellor and have good judgement from altitude above water *compared to* what you may be able to see (it is a different perspective- you may be invisible to him in a glare or blend into the background, etc). Things happen relatively quickly in an airplane when something goes wrong at low altitudes, so blinding a pilot on his final approach to landing is a prescription for getting not only yourself killed if you are in his path, but almost assuredly also his passengers and crew. Instead you should make sure you are that much more visible to him so he can't miss seeing you. Red |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Rick Cortese wrote:
Unless you are in your own home, you may have the "duty to retreat" in your state. This means if someone is harassing you, you have to leave the area. I'm as serious as a broken leg about this, you have to leave or you will be charged with a crime. And John Weiss replied: In context, there is a serious flaw in your "duty to retreat" argument: A kayaker is ABSOLUTELY UNABLE to "retreat" from a powerboat! All he can do is snip There is another possible flaw here, in some (most? all?) states your boat may be recognized *as* your own home when you are aboard, and some people live aboard their boat as a primary residence. Also, even in states that require you to "retreat", there are usually extenuating circumstanses that may be recognized as legal allowing you to stand if you cannot, for one reason or another, retreat without futher endangering your life. You are also in most states allowed to defend the life of a loved one, in or out of a home, so that may add another dimension. Of course, all of this depends on how good your defense lawyer is... In my state, if I were to defend myself inside my home from an armed attacker which resulted in killing the attacker, I would bury the slimeball somewhere and tell no one. Here it was declared some years ago by the state illegal to defend one's self, but the lawsuits are the worst part - you will lose everything even if you are declared innocent. |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Rick Cortese wrote:
Have you followed the Clearlake incidence in California? Latitude 38 has been good in their coverage and presentation of the two sides. Most of it seems to be in the form of letters to the editor, the following http://www.latitude38.com/letters/200708.html about 1/3 of the way down is the pertinent letter/response. I mention it to illustrate what I see as a certain level of bias on the part of authorities. For instance eye witnesses were told their testimony was not needed. This included at least two people that one saw the sailboats running lights on and another who said the saloon lights were on. This is apparently an effort to support the Deputy's version of events where he says the boat was unlit. While I don't agree with Hal's reaction to your going armed, you might want to think about it since there is a presumed guilty against you by a large segment of the population if you are armed. Yes there are Yahoos that would think it funny to try and swamp you with their wake or otherwise ruin your boating experience. Thing is they succeed in drowning you, the presence of a gun on your carcase would just make people think "He was probably a crack dealer" or something equivalent. There are laws against brandishing a gun so the ability to do what you think you can do is dubious. That is, jail time for you vs. a ticket for the person who precipitated the incident. Unless you are in your own home, you may have the "duty to retreat" in your state. This means if someone is harassing you, you have to leave the area. I'm as serious as a broken leg about this, you have to leave or you will be charged with a crime. Carry a camera, flare gun, and pepper spray. If you are in an area that doesn't allow excessive wakes or speed, the sight of a camera taking their picture should be enough to deter knucleheads. If you do carry a gun, don't bring it out unless someone is threatening you with deadly force. Rick, First - Thank you for the Clear Lake reference, I had heard of it and nothing more. Yes - Rule 6 should apply here, but LEO protect their own when well they should not. I got roped into teaching classes to potential marine patrol officers. (As attached in a prior sig, I am a licensed mariner.) I have also been involved in law enforcement. Many were expecting a "get paid for sleeping through the rubber stamp course". They were upset when they were expected to actually know the rules of the road. I didn't get invited back. You might go back and read the thread before Hal got involved. There was a lot of tongue and cheek humor (whooshed on Hal) about how to make your presents know to an incapable (and possibly inebriated) power boat operator. In six decades on the water, I have been hit (racing under sail doesn't count here) eight times. On three of those occasions, we saw burden vessel alter course to collide. In one of those cases, (it was a second encounter) I had a 12ga flare pistol ready. I fired a white star directly over the windscreen of the oncoming vessel and got not response. While I understand your sentiments, the camera will be lost, the flare gun didn't cause him to alter course and the pepper spray won't do you any good as he is speeding away laughing about what he has just done. A result of all this is that I do carry devices on board my small boats, like a hundred feet of black polypropylene to trail aft. I have also been know to look up the registration and then locate the owner and go see him with a badge conspicuously hidden and the back strap of the holster in plain view. I don't worry about where I carry. I have been licensed to carry for many years and know all about the laws. Unfortunately, as said in a prior note, all you need to get out on the water with too much horsepower is a credit rating. Until that changes, the situation won't change. It is a shame, there have been many days that I would have taken my grandchildren out in my day boat, but the weather was just too nice and therefore dangerous. Situations like Clear Lake don't help at all. Thank you for your interest. Matt Colie |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
"Rick Cortese" wrote...
While I don't agree with Hal's reaction to your going armed, you might want to think about it since there is a presumed guilty against you by a large segment of the population if you are armed. Yes there are Yahoos that would think it funny to try and swamp you with their wake or otherwise ruin your boating experience. Thing is they succeed in drowning you, the presence of a gun on your carcase would just make people think "He was probably a crack dealer" or something equivalent. There are laws against brandishing a gun so the ability to do what you think you can do is dubious. That is, jail time for you vs. a ticket for the person who precipitated the incident. Unless you are in your own home, you may have the "duty to retreat" in your state. This means if someone is harassing you, you have to leave the area. I'm as serious as a broken leg about this, you have to leave or you will be charged with a crime. In context, there is a serious flaw in your "duty to retreat" argument: A kayaker is ABSOLUTELY UNABLE to "retreat" from a powerboat! All he can do is insignificantly reduce the closure speed by turning away, at a significant disadvantage in visibility and collision aspect. OTOH, you are correct that in many people's pea-brains, there WILL be a presumption of "guilt" or "criminal intent" regarding a person who dares to be armed. Further, "brandishing" or actually firing a firearm is indeed a "no-no" unless the user is in fear of loss of life or limb (and, in some cases, property). I would submit, then, that firing a .38 INTO THE AIR in order to get the attention of a speedboat operator who is in the process of preparing to ram your kayak, may well be a valid reaction to a valid fear of imminent, lethal danger. Carry a camera, flare gun, and pepper spray. If you are in an area that doesn't allow excessive wakes or speed, the sight of a camera taking their picture should be enough to deter knucleheads. If you do carry a gun, don't bring it out unless someone is threatening you with deadly force. If a boater doesn't see a kayak, [s]he will be oblivious to any camera aboard the kayak. Pepper spray is useless unless you are being boarded AND the boarder is downwind. A LOUD whistle MAY be heard over the wind and roar of an engine and/or through the bulkheads of an enclosed cockpit... A flare gun is certainly a good idea. However, if the flare does not erupt until it is at some altitude, will it further distract the attention of the doughhead powerboat operator from the kayak that initiated it? In this scenario a parachute flare will be almost useless, though a short-lived pencil flare may be useful. OTOH, how long will it take to get the flare out of storage, and will it be useless in the future once "prepped" for immediate use? A .38 or .410 or 12-ga with an appropriate flare round in the chamber may well be a reasonable substitute for a dedicated flare gun where local laws allow it. A .38 or .410 with a blank or "snakeshot" round, or a 12-ga blank/starter round may be a reasonable second choice, in order to minimize danger from the "what goes up must come down" law of physics. Personally, I have yet to encounter a situation in my kayak where I needed anything more than a whistle, though I have considered adding a signal mirror to attract the attention of landing seaplane pilots. I do carry flares on the kayak, but I don't think it is worth the hassle of carrying a firearm (though I have carried one on my sailboat in the past). I have occasionally wished for a movie camera to get the numbers from a jetskier who's being a complete idiot, but there is little chance of any law enforcement agency doing anything with even a movie, until the idiot actually hurts somebody... |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
On Sep 16, 6:10 am, Matt Colie wrote:
Come back and discuss more this after you have spent a day either as first responder at one of these incidents or maybe just one pleasant afternoon as a member of the recovery team diving in search of the bodies of the victims of a boater such as you seem to support. There has never been anyplace that I have been where there was effective law enforcement on the water. Please don't tell me to leave it to them. That will start another set of really dreadful stories I have accumulated in years of cleaning up after people such as yourself. Thank you your opinion. Matt Colie I'm well aware of the contents of this thread. As anyone, with more than a cursory understanding of the written word, will also be aware you you're advocating taking pot shots at other boaters "Dave, This is why all of my handguns are stainless. remember that most of the small boats in use are fiberglass and all the newer ones have floation. But, if you can get a couple of holes in the bow, below the rest waterline, the boat won't sink until it stops. This way, the passengers will not be at little risk but the boat will probably be out of commission for a significant period. BTW----Funny that you should mention speeding boats and law enforcement. Perhaps you're related to Lake County's Chief Deputy Sheriff Russell Perdock? CLEAR LAKE, Calif., Aug. 13, 2007 (KGO) - Authorities in Lake County are being accused of trying to protect one of their own. The number two man in the Lake County Sheriff's Department was involved in a boating accident that killed a woman on Clear Lake, 50 miles north of Santa Rosa. It might seem like a simple case at first glance. A power boat slams into a sailboat at night, killing a woman. However, one person's been charged in the death, not the power boat driver or the sailboat owner, but the man who happened to be steering the sailboat. April 29th, 2006 started out as a good day for Bismarck Dinius. He sailed in a regatta on Clear Lake, ate dinner at a local yacht club, and headed out for a sunset cruise on a friend's boat. Bismarck Dinius: "Just one of those chance things, they were heading their way down towards the dock and you know, running across me, 'hey, we're going out right now, do you want to go for a ride?'" It was a dark night on the water with no moon and very little wind. The five friends sailed for about half an hour, then turned back toward the dock. They didn't see the power boat bearing down on them. Peter Elmer, Retired Police Sergeant: "My estimate was about 50 miles an hour, which is quite fast, especially at nighttime." People on shore watched this tragedy unfold, including a retired police sergeant who oversaw the marine unit for East Bay Regional Parks. Peter Elmer: "I said to everybody who was sitting on the dock, 'there's a clown that's either going to kill himself or somebody else.' I kind of regret saying that now, but I knew immediately that this guy was going way too fast for the conditions." The power boat hit the sailboat from the rear with tremendous force. It flew on top of the sailboat, crushing the cabin, snapping the mast, landing in the water in front of the sailboat. Jennifer Patterson, witness: "All of a sudden, everybody started screaming." Gina Seago: "They were all calling for help, 'somebody help us', and everything." |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
John Weiss wrote:
"Rick Cortese" wrote... snip In context, there is a serious flaw in your "duty to retreat" argument: A kayaker is ABSOLUTELY UNABLE to "retreat" from a powerboat! All he can do is insignificantly reduce the closure speed by turning away, at a significant disadvantage in visibility and collision aspect. While I agree with you in spirit and fact... One of our local assistant D.A.s tried to prosecute someone for being under the influence of Prozac while driving. Same guy prosecuted my older son for trespassing even when told it was actually my younger underage son who did the act. Thing is, the younger son had the older son's I.D. and showed it to a Deputy so the D.A. figured it would be easier to get a guilty verdict against the older son even though the Deputy also said he wasn't the guy. Then there is the rumored motto of the prosecutors in Texas "Anyone can convict a guilty person but it takes a real lawyer to convict an innocent man!" I just drift/mention this because laws are deliberately ambiguous to the point where you can get your ~$10,000 legal fees punishment to prove you are innocent for fighting the system like my older son did. I've actually been taunted with the fact they will use their unlimited resources to try and bankrupt you with legal fees. If I had a nickel for every time I was told by some liar with under the tint of authority "We well see who they will believe" I could get a nice cup of coffee at Starbucks. It could be the mayor's, D.A.s son, or one of the Kennedys in that speed boat. Remember in the Clearlake crash the guy at the tiller of the sailboat was the only person charged. The official theory was, despite eye witness accounts to the contrary, he was running w/o lights and therefore invisible to the Deputy. Too many examples to list, Duke rugby ring a bell? I don't like or endorse the situation of course. I just ack that it is the current state of affairs. You just have to hope you get a good jury to nullify some of the crap that goes on. Rick |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Rick Cortese wrote:
snip therefore invisible to the Deputy. Too many examples to list, Duke rugby ring a bell? Whoops! Sorry to the Duke rugby team. It shouldn't ring a bell since it was lacrosse! Rick |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
"Red" wrote...
Personally, I have yet to encounter a situation in my kayak where I needed anything more than a whistle, though I have considered adding a signal mirror to attract the attention of landing seaplane pilots. With the perspective of a former airplane pilot, I will urge you to be very careful if you choose to use a mirror to reflect the sun into the eyes of a landing seaplane pilot. It is hard enough to see clearly through a spinning propellor and have good judgement from altitude above water *compared to* what you may be able to see (it is a different perspective- you may be invisible to him in a glare or blend into the background, etc). Things happen relatively quickly in an airplane when something goes wrong at low altitudes, so blinding a pilot on his final approach to landing is a prescription for getting not only yourself killed if you are in his path, but almost assuredly also his passengers and crew. Instead you should make sure you are that much more visible to him so he can't miss seeing you. Thanks for your concern. From the perspective of a retired Naval Aviator and active airline pilot (747 Captain), I am aware of the potential danger from dazzling with a signal mirror. While keeping the signal on the airplane would present a danger, a quick flash or 3 across it should not be a problem. A kayaker can be only so visible... My PFD is bright yellow and my paddle blades (which, if you've ever noticed, are the most visible part of a kayak when they are moving) and broad-brim hat are white. If a pilot misses all that in the background clutter, or is focused on a sailboat or jetski somewhere else, there is little more I can do. I paddle frequently on Lake Washington where there is an active seaplane base, and have to cross the landing area to get to the Sammamish Slough. I have yet to have a problem with any of the Kenmore Air pilots, but on occasion I wonder whether one of the transients practicing water landings is keeping an adequate lookout... Also, a kayak can only move about 5 kt max, and an airplane can come "around the corner" and line up to land with very little warning. If I happen to be crossing the landing area when he appears, I cannot easily move out of the way if he doesn't adjust his landing path to avoid me. |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
"Red" wrote...
In context, there is a serious flaw in your "duty to retreat" argument: A kayaker is ABSOLUTELY UNABLE to "retreat" from a powerboat! All he can do is snip There is another possible flaw here, in some (most? all?) states your boat may be recognized *as* your own home when you are aboard, and some people live aboard their boat as a primary residence. Also, even in states that require you to "retreat", there are usually extenuating circumstanses that may be recognized as legal allowing you to stand if you cannot, for one reason or another, retreat without futher endangering your life. Indeed, the laws as well as the perceptions change significantly when you transition from kayak to sailboat or powerboat. Also, laws are in a constant state of flux as court decisions contradict or modify current law as to the definition of a "home" in the context of a boat or RV. While the case of a liveaboard or a RV driver on extended vacation is more clear, a kayak (context of OP's original question) would almost never be considered a "home," even though it is legally recognized as a "vessel." |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
I have been a long-time wilderness canoeist and can tell you that the single
biggest danger to canoeists/kayakers should be casual PWC users who whave not been properly educated. Let me share with you why I no longer go near cottage lakes or open water where PWCs are often seen. While canoeing with my wife and 2 yr old daughter on a large body of water, a group of 3 or 4 PWC's were spotted jumping powerboat wakes. They looked like they were having fun. We were struggling with the same wakes, trying to make headway as we picked our way out from shore. A 15ft boat passed us, and we rode out its wake, then another. The PWCs came over and started hopping the waves of the boats. One of them pointed at us and said something to his buddies. I had no idea what. They all started moving around near us, but far enough off so as not to be dangerous. Minutes later another boat passed by. I kept a close watch of it so as to be able to quarter its wake, when my wife started to scream. I looked to the opposite side of the canoe to see a Jetski screaming towards us. He launched himself off the wake of the boat, barely clearing our canoe and nearly hitting my daughter in the head. God only knows what would have happenned if he hadn't made it over our canoe. We made our way to shore where it was better fighting the backwash of the waves than being dead. I wonder if his friends were supposed to be "next". Now whenever I am in the vicinity of large boats I stay near shore, and I never go near Jetski's unless I can keep a very close eye on them, and I avoid PWC hotspots at all costs. MMC wrote: 'Be ready to spin the kayak to bow on. This is not to present a smaller target, but to allow the boat to do its best to escape damage and [quoted text clipped - 42 lines] Matt Colie Lifelong Waterman, Licensed Mariner I'd like to add to Matt and Anthony's list an air horn (if yon Rodney Dangerfield can't hear one of those- he must be dead) and to make sure your PFD is bright orange and NOT one of the more aesthetically "yachtie" pleasing colors like beige, camo, blue, yellow, etc. My little rant- for the life of me, I cannot understand why a life vest much match peoples outfit and eyes when they're going out to sea? Might bump into the ladies from church? Same with foul weather gear. None of the other colors even come close in visibility to international orange and I'd rather be found if floundering in the deep blue (or seen by Rodney) than stylish. But, just my 2c. MMC -- Message posted via BoatKB.com http://www.boatkb.com/Uwe/Forums.asp...iling/200711/1 |
Questions : Kayaking with Boats present
Sorry to hear this but it confirms not the need for instruction but
punishment. These PWC drivers knew what they were doing. It is wrong in any book and I've seen it far too often from the helm of my sailboat. "Prospector via BoatKB.com" u37987@uwe wrote in message news:7ad290b6312e2@uwe... I have been a long-time wilderness canoeist and can tell you that the single biggest danger to canoeists/kayakers should be casual PWC users who whave not been properly educated. Let me share with you why I no longer go near cottage lakes or open water where PWCs are often seen. While canoeing with my wife and 2 yr old daughter on a large body of water, a group of 3 or 4 PWC's were spotted jumping powerboat wakes. They looked like they were having fun. We were struggling with the same wakes, trying to make headway as we picked our way out from shore. A 15ft boat passed us, and we rode out its wake, then another. The PWCs came over and started hopping the waves of the boats. One of them pointed at us and said something to his buddies. I had no idea what. They all started moving around near us, but far enough off so as not to be dangerous. Minutes later another boat passed by. I kept a close watch of it so as to be able to quarter its wake, when my wife started to scream. I looked to the opposite side of the canoe to see a Jetski screaming towards us. He launched himself off the wake of the boat, barely clearing our canoe and nearly hitting my daughter in the head. God only knows what would have happenned if he hadn't made it over our canoe. We made our way to shore where it was better fighting the backwash of the waves than being dead. I wonder if his friends were supposed to be "next". Now whenever I am in the vicinity of large boats I stay near shore, and I never go near Jetski's unless I can keep a very close eye on them, and I avoid PWC hotspots at all costs. MMC wrote: 'Be ready to spin the kayak to bow on. This is not to present a smaller target, but to allow the boat to do its best to escape damage and [quoted text clipped - 42 lines] Matt Colie Lifelong Waterman, Licensed Mariner I'd like to add to Matt and Anthony's list an air horn (if yon Rodney Dangerfield can't hear one of those- he must be dead) and to make sure your PFD is bright orange and NOT one of the more aesthetically "yachtie" pleasing colors like beige, camo, blue, yellow, etc. My little rant- for the life of me, I cannot understand why a life vest much match peoples outfit and eyes when they're going out to sea? Might bump into the ladies from church? Same with foul weather gear. None of the other colors even come close in visibility to international orange and I'd rather be found if floundering in the deep blue (or seen by Rodney) than stylish. But, just my 2c. MMC -- Message posted via BoatKB.com http://www.boatkb.com/Uwe/Forums.asp...iling/200711/1 |
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