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F. Mason
 
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Default Taking BA off in a stopper?

I think Ive read about this somewhere but cannot remember where.

If you are thrashed about in a stopper and cannot swim out, in theory your
buoyancy can contribute to keeping you IN the stopper I believe.

Are there ACTUAL recorded cases of someone taking their PFD off, cool as
anything and diving out of the recirculating water?

Ta FM


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Mike Taylor
 
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I think I'd keep mine on, just so that they can find the body more
easily....
Mike in Lunenburg


"F. Mason" wrote in message
...
I think Ive read about this somewhere but cannot remember where.

If you are thrashed about in a stopper and cannot swim out, in theory your
buoyancy can contribute to keeping you IN the stopper I believe.

Are there ACTUAL recorded cases of someone taking their PFD off, cool as
anything and diving out of the recirculating water?

Ta FM




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Nidge
 
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F. Mason wrote


If you are thrashed about in a stopper and cannot swim out, in theory your
buoyancy can contribute to keeping you IN the stopper I believe.


Its fairly sound theory - the recirculating water is at the surface, the
flow through is in the deeper water ..... And that's what you need to dive
into to get out of the stopper. I'd try diving with my BA on first
'though cos if the flow is as strong as a stopper you (almost) can't get out
of implies you'll need you BA once you do get out of it. But I guess if you
were going to drown if you didn't.....

Nidge




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Broooz
 
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"Nidge" wrote in message
...

Its fairly sound theory - the recirculating water is at the surface, the
flow through is in the deeper water ..... And that's what you need to

dive
into to get out of the stopper. I'd try diving with my BA on first
'though cos if the flow is as strong as a stopper you (almost) can't get

out
of implies you'll need you BA once you do get out of it. But I guess if

you
were going to drown if you didn't.....


The last "official" recommendation that the BCU safety people put out I seem
to recall was NOT to do this, but as you say, if it is really your last
resort then what have you got to loose.

On the other hand, if you are still strong enough to take off your BA (no
easy matter), would it be better to wait for help to arrive - presumably
help can't be too far away unless you have been pretty daft.


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Dave Manby
 
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This argument really goes back 30+ years to when we wore lifejackets for
paddling (old Ottersports were de rigour at one stage) and the buoyancy
of them was so much greater that the floatation was such that being held
was a problem. The normal pfd that we now wear for kayaking are so much
lower in floatation that any dangerous stopper will sink the paddler and
keeping the pfd on is strongly recommended.


In message , Nidge
writes

F. Mason wrote


If you are thrashed about in a stopper and cannot swim out, in theory your
buoyancy can contribute to keeping you IN the stopper I believe.


Its fairly sound theory - the recirculating water is at the surface, the
flow through is in the deeper water ..... And that's what you need to dive
into to get out of the stopper. I'd try diving with my BA on first
'though cos if the flow is as strong as a stopper you (almost) can't get out
of implies you'll need you BA once you do get out of it. But I guess if you
were going to drown if you didn't.....

Nidge





--
Dave Manby
Details of the Coruh river and my book "Many Rivers To Run" at
http://www.dmanby.demon.co.uk



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Nidge
 
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Dave Manby wrote in message
...
This argument really goes back 30+ years to when we wore lifejackets for
paddling (old Ottersports were de rigour at one stage) and the buoyancy
of them was so much greater that the floatation was such that being held
was a problem.


Well, yes and no. I think I still have one of those old ribbed things stuck
in the garage. (I've probably and old BA somewhere in there as well). The
old BAs (and even more so the things with the sodding great collars, which
TBH were really lifejackets, do have a *lot* of floatation. But then again
my not-so-ultra-white-water 'white water' BA is rated as having 70 newts of
lift [1] which is a fair bit too and I think there's specialised stuff with
quite a lot more.

[1] Though how they ever trained 70 of the things to do synchronised
swimming ..... and then measure how hard they pulled still baffles me.

Nidge


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Allegedly...

A Scottish rafting company recently made a big splash by accidentally
running two rafts, complete with punters, over the right hand side of
Eas a' Chathaidh on The Orchy in fairly high water. This was probably
not their finest hour. Carnage ensued though, thankfully, no one was
seriously hurt.

Anyway, anecdotal evidence suggests that all the punters subbed through
the towback and popped up some way downstream while the two raft guides
both took a bit of a working in the hole. It has been suggested that
this was down to the punters wearing wet wetsuits and the guides
wearing drysuits, a drysuit having a reasonable degree of bouyancy even
if well 'bled'.

On the original subject: no, i don't think I'd ever take my BA off if
stuck in a hole.

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