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Safety Story


Jeff Hegedus <jhegedus@…>
02/28/06 #1063

A useful post from a paddler not too proud to share (thank you).
Jude recently made the excellent point to me that, as more paddlers
increase their skill levels, and venture further, there are more of
these stories; we just don't hear about them:

Apologies to those who've already seen this message in private posts,

but I felt it instructive to pass it along to the larger group.

I went out solo from Redwood City Harbor Sunday, 2/25 morning ~9:30am
in my Huki S1-A surfski; the forecast called for strong gusty southeast
(onshore) winds, but it was calm when I started, and I changed my original plan
of staying in the Redwood City sloughs and instead paddled southeast out
of the harbor in the open San Francisco Bay to the Dumbarton Bridge. The
shoreline runs roughly northwest-southeast along this part of SF Bay. On my
way back, about 3/4 mile short of the harbor mouth and now with an ebbing tide,
the wind started gusting from the southwest (i.e., offshore), caught my
paddle and flipped me. After two re-entries and re-flips, I faced winds so
strong that I couldn't stay downwind of the boat - the wind kept forcing the
capsized boat to turn turtle and bang me on the head. I slipped
under the boat and got upwind of it, only to have the wind snatch the boat from
my grasp as my wet gloved fingers slipped on the gelcoat.

I had plenty of time to contemplate the folly of not using my ankle
leash as I drifted away from shore; my reflections were colored by mounting
frustration as I watched my boat, now almost a mile away from me, get
blown, unnoticed, just a hundred feet away from a couple of OC-6s. At the
point when I realized that I was going to miss the last jutting headland
and my only hope was to snag a buoy far out in the Bay, the last couple of
OC-1s still out saw me. One of them had me hang on to their boat while the
other went in to fetch a motor-boat to recover me and my ski (it was too
windy for them to tow me in even if I kicked hard). Luckily both I and my ski
were deposited safely back on land with no dents except to my self esteem
and no losses but for my visor and water bag, but things could have gone
very wrong very easily.

I usually carry a cell phone in a waterproof case with the Coast
Guard on speed dial but left it, along with the leash, in my car - after all, I
wasn't going to leave protected waters on this paddle, was I?
Another case

Never again am I venturing into open water without a leash! The wind
today came on very suddenly … ironically, it was calm again half an hour
later.

The piece-de-resistance was watching the Coast Guard Auxiliary
washing off their big cruiser back in the harbor; when I said that I could really
have done with their assistance today, they nonchalantly responded, “Oh,
we're done for the day, it's too rough to be outside now.” !!!!

Lessons learnt (as summarized by experienced local paddler Dave
Jensen):
(1) In anything more than a moderate wind, I find it impossible to
re-mount a ski from the downwind side. While on the downwind side of the ski,
the wind is blowing the ski over the top of the paddler, and his/her legs
end up drifting under the ski…with the toes possibly touching the water
surface on the upwind side of the ski. It's a very difficult position to
initiate a re-mount. Best bet is to swim under the ski and re-mount from the
upwind side. Nobody has taught me this…it's just something I've picked up
through lots of trial and error.

(2) Leashes…I usually keep my leash (purchased from Huki) on my
ski all the time…24/7. When I'm done paddling, I wrap it around the bungies
behind the seat and then fasten the paddler end of the leash back to
the cables near the pedals. I think this takes less time than taking it
off and putting it back on with each paddle. But more importantly, it's
impossible for me to forget it.

(3) The ultimate safety item for paddling alone is a waterproof 2-
way VHF marine radio or a cell phone in a waterproof back. West Marine has a
decent selection of marine radios and waterproof bags. I'm starting to
carry a radio with me more and more, as I want to make sure I'll always make
it back home to feed the dog.

Be safe!
Vineet«

Dale McKinnon
02/28/06 #1064

It is easy to get spacey living in the Bay Area. The place moves at a crazy pace, and to think that you can leave a leash and vhf/cellphone behind, simply because you just want to go out even for a few minutes close to land is a byproduct of constant distraction. Not only did he forget important safety gear, he also got the date wrong… Sunday was the 26th, not the 25th. It's hard to get it that Mother Nature is not part of your Blackberry.

But I guess he understands what “gusty” means now. I skyped a friend in Half Moon Bay yesterday at 3 p.m. to check on the weather happenings down there and he said it was scarily flat calm, too warm and a very dark grey sky. Between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. the anemometer at Pillar Point Harbor topped out at 102 mph, on Angel Island 98 mph, and 71 mph at SFO. By 8:30 p.m. it was blowing 10 mph at Pillar Point… Last night was the mother gust, I guess.

steven wort
02/28/06 #1065

In my distant past (before the days of hand held VHF's) I used to do a lot of windsurfing, and would never leave shore (in a good blow) without a pack of handlheld flares, and at least one small orange smoke?

Does no one use flares anymore?