DittoEven with my wife right there in the cockpit, I'm essentially single-handing.
Good call. I also try to keep my wife involved in order to alleviate her other fear, the chance that I fall out and she has to execute an MOB. Or at a minimum, she understands how to stop the boat.Seriously, you may need to develop the safety procedures that gives your wife assurance, and then be diligent about following them. Her fear isn't irrational since you can't eliminate all risk. If she can trust that you are taking care of yourself, she should be accepting. If not, then you may have a problem that has no solution.
She is wise to read the fine print ! After I was discharged from the Marines I had no insurance while I was heading off for school on the GI Bill. I had this hair-brained idea to take my Kaw 750 to the drag strip for some fun. Long story short: my bike picked up a high speed wobble at 114mph and I crashed. I got a severe case of road rash! Fortunately, the entrance fee at the drag strip provided insurance, so my week stay was covered. After 4 years with hardly a scratch during my tour of duty.On life insurance..... I once got a chance to go to Kittyhawk for a weekend of hang gliding lessons for only $35. It was a package deal through work.... My wife SHOWED me the clause in my life insurance that stated it did not cover sky diving, hang gliding or scuba diving accidents. She said I could go if I purchased a rider.![]()
Immediacy is so overblown.tried to reach me 3 times in the past hour