- Oct 22, 2014
- 23,370
It is nearly the 1st of May. Who could have imagined last October 2020, when boats were being hauled , the pandemic and elections consumed the news, that we would survive til the start of a new boating season.
Now that we have survived the dark winter...
The question is are we ready for that Cold Water Shock!
What is Cold Water Shock you ask... It is what happens to you when you fall off your boat into the still winter chilled water of spring. It is the cold water that brings the fog, we all dislike, as it spoils what starts out as a pretty sunrise.
It is what happens to your body, involuntarily, when you go into the Spring time water.
It is what kills boater not ready for it.
The Royal Yachting Association has capitalized the information about Cold Water Shock into the following:

Now that we have survived the dark winter...
The question is are we ready for that Cold Water Shock!
What is Cold Water Shock you ask... It is what happens to you when you fall off your boat into the still winter chilled water of spring. It is the cold water that brings the fog, we all dislike, as it spoils what starts out as a pretty sunrise.
It is what happens to your body, involuntarily, when you go into the Spring time water.
It is what kills boater not ready for it.
The Royal Yachting Association has capitalized the information about Cold Water Shock into the following:
Immersion in cold water rapidly incapacitates you and can kill you.
The sudden exposure of your head and body to cold water can cause a number of involuntary body reactions – this condition is known as cold water shock. It is one of the most profound stimuli that the body can encounter and it cannot be prevented. It can be as swift as it is deadly.
Because cold water shock occurs well before the effects of hypothermia, it is far deadlier, yet less understood, by the recreational boater.
Hypothermia kills over a period of time, as heat is conducted away from the body leading to a gradual decline in body core temperature, the loss of swimming ability, unconsciousness and ultimately death.
In contrast cold water shock can be lethal in minutes as it can cause a number of instant, powerful, involuntary respiratory reflexes, such as sudden increase in heart and blood pressure that may result in cardiac arrest, even for people in good health. Your ability to ‘swim like a fish’ will have no impact on your body’s involuntary response.
At a water temperature of below 15°C, and if you are not wearing a life jacket, especially an automatic one, cold water shock will:
- cause you to inhale as you go under the water, due to an involuntary gasping reflex, and drown without coming back to the surface
- drastically reduce your ability to hold your breath underwater, typically from a minute or so to less than 10 seconds
- induce vertigo as your ears are exposed to cold water, resulting in failure to differentiate between up and down.
- Check your PFD to be sure there are no leaks, did that rescue knife punch a hole in your floatation tube?
- Check the date, your PFD has an expiration date if it is auto triggered.
- Check that the CO2 canisters are properly screws into the PFD.
- If it is time to change the canisters, then pull the cord to see if they will work in an emergency. It might be a deflating experience.
- If you are ambitious and really want that "immersion experience" find a warm pool and jump in wearing your PFD. There is nothing like going under water and having the sucker inflate, popping you up to the surface. It is better than that sinking feeling when you are expecting fireworks and you find your self sinking to the bottom of the pool. Better the pool than than the sea.
- Check your jacklines. Are they ready for another season? Are they showing signs of UV deterioration? Did they save you last season from that impromptu swim and need to be replaced?
- Check your tethers. Do the quick releases still open or are they crusted shut. Are the tethers of an age that replacement is now?
- Have you examined your secure points and pad eyes recently? Has water seeped into the core of your deck because the screws bedding has deteriorated? Is now the time to add a backing plate to your pad eye/secure point because the fender washer you used is starting to pull through the FPR deck?