Yes that. It cannot be opened by a person while being dragged or suspended by their own weight. Its why you rarely seem them on tethers any more.
Yes that. It cannot be opened by a person while being dragged or suspended by their own weight. Its why you rarely seem them on tethers any more.
I'm gonna try that with the snap shackle used at the top of my spinnaker, very soon.Yes that. It cannot be opened by a person while being dragged or suspended by their own weight.
Ayup. That, and regular inspection/maintenance.I find some of those snap shackles hard to open even with no load. Maybe if it had a nice long lanyard tied to the pin to get a better grip?
Exactly. When do you cut? When swimming seeems better than drowning. The thing to remember is that there is no recipe for this. What you want is OPTIONS. And sometimes the best option is simply the least worst. As Gunni says, have your rescue knife always ready. Like the Spiderco Salt.So when do you cut the tether? If you are being dragged under water and about to drown? If you are solo is it best to cut loose and watch your ride sail away? I guess it depends on where you are at. In the middle of the ocean I believe I would stay connected and fight. This is the reason I want my tether to keep me on deck in the first place. I find some of those snap shackles hard to open even with no load. Maybe if it had a nice long lanyard tied to the pin to get a better grip?
The problem I have with a safety plan that probably won't work is that someone will read it and believe it might help, like a rope trailed behind the boat. Climbers refer to marginal anchors "psychological protection," and they are one of the leading cause of death. A climber takes a risk he shouldn't have because he convinced himself that the last anchor was better than the actual shite it was. He'd have been much better off accepting the cold reality of the situation.
There's nothing wrong with having a knife in your pocket. I keep another one in a pocket forward of the mast--it seemed like a good idea and it saves a trip now and then.
Keeping your head up to breath can be a challenge at 4 knots of boat speed on a warm summer day, that is why you need to practice a roll to your back and have the gear (knife) to free a tether if necessary. The attitude of the boat has no bearing on the process. People die because they panic, are unconscious, or cannot release their tether. Two of those outcomes are preventable with training, and the proper gear. Cutting your tether is a last option, you want to be able to stay with the boat if possible.Or rather I'm pretty sure I could not do it. From the pics I've seen, keeping your head up to breath can be nearly impossible when the boat is rail-down. That is why they die.
Well, I gave it a try.It cannot be opened by a person while being dragged or suspended by their own weight.