Tethers
A previous poster wrote - You are better off to stay on the boat or get completely free of it. I don't agree. Under some circumstances the tether is going to save you. Here in Maine, the water temp never gets to more than about 60 degrees (except in some funny currents). In 60 degree water you are going to die of exposure in about an hour. You are going to lose the abilit to swim long before that. If you can swim two knots, you swim a lot better than I do. So if you're more than a mile from land you're going to die if you can't either get back to your boat or get picked up by another. That's if you're in really good shape. I'm fit, but not a triathelete. I veiw the tether as a device first and foremost to keep me on the boat. I use the windward jackline and a shortish tether so that if I fall on deck, its unlikely I'll fall overboard. Sometimes its limiting, but I view the imposition as worth the benefit. Secondly, when I sail alone I do not usually cleat my sheets. This comes from years of dinghy sailing where if you turtle the boat with cleated sheets you have a bear of a time righting it. So, if I were to go overboard alone under most circumstances, the boat is going to stall, and I may be able to get back on it. Thirdly, when I sail with other people, it makes their job of recovering me a lot easier if they don't have to look for me. If I'm attached to the boat, I'm not hard to find. Many people view wearing this equipment restrictive, especially as in order to be effective you need to the taught jacklines and short tethers. I'm willing to endure that restriction in the interest of insurance. Paranoid? Maybe, but it works for me.Justin - O'day Owners' Web