Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() NYC XYZ wrote: I mean, even though it's broad ****ing daylight, if you paddle and you get capsized by a powercraft, IT'S YOUR GODDAMNED FAULT -- right, speed bumps? http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories...MPLATE=DEFAULT You know, it's posts like yours above that go a long way toward *increasing* the animosity between various boating factions. Nice work. The rowers weren't merely capsized by the powerboat, the powerboat operator collided with the shell. The powerboat operator was clearly at fault. That said, I know from personal local experience that many of the rowers must bicycle down to the shell house. Some of our local bicyclists will pedal down the middle of the road at about 5mph, and if anything is said some of them flip you the finger and remind you that they have the same "rights as an automobile". Those same cyclists will come to an intersection with a STOP sign, pull up onto the sidewalk for about 10 feet and wthout missing a beat just jet out into the cross traffic. As people slam on brakes etc to avoid hitting the bikers that a few yards earlier were subject to the same STOP sign as all other traffic, there is all too often some comment like "Can't you see I'm in a crosswalk, you son of a bitch?" We have an active crew program on some of our local lakes. There is a 7 knot speed limit on these lakes, but this is routinely ignored by the crews. No problem, really, except that the shells are usually accompanied by small powerboats that also ignore the 7-knot speed limit. I've seen the coaches in the little outboard vessels go flying across the lake at 15-20 knots to bitch out some poor guy doing 5-6 knots on the other side of the lake because they think he's generating a bit more wake than their prima-donna crews should be forced to deal with. All vessels are responsible for any damage caused by wake. No problem. Vessels being rowed have the right of way over nearly all other watercraft, including sail. No problem. Where some of the scullers apparently get confused is the part of the regulations that say it is the responsibilty of all vessels to avoid a collision-(I've often seen then just start across a narrow channel under the bow on an oncoming boat, as if they're saying "we have the right of way, they'll just have to live with it and work around us somehow"), as well as the explicit requirement in the rules of the road for stand-on vessels to maintain course and speed. BTW, our local instances certainly aren't connected with an organized racing event. They're just daily practice, with shells headed in any number of random directions simultaneously. Rather obviously, an organized regatta can exert a defensible claim of exclusive use of a waterway. We have a large crew race every year, and the entire waterway is shut down for that event. No problem. Fortunately, most of the local rowers don't have the same hostile attitude your post displayed. If you ever get up to my neck of the woods and I'm out in my boat- please make yourself known to me. You can be sure I will modify my wake appropriately. :-) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Hey, Speed Bumps, I Guess These Rowers Brought It on Themselves, Too, Right? | General | |||
Hey, Speed Bumps, I Guess These Rowers Brought It on Themselves, Too, Right? | General |