cincy_cosmo
Cadet
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2007
- Messages
- 18
As my family gets closer to buying a boat we spent a morning at one of the docks at a open horsepower lake in Ohio near us. Watching people launch and retrieve boats.
#1 observation: The book "A Complete Idiots Guide to Boating and Sailing" pretty much covers the topic well, but many people develop shortcuts that make launching faster.
#2 observation: Many of the shortcuts seem to also compromise safety. For instance, a Dad launched his boat with a very young girl (say 5 years old) in the boat alone. He held the bow line in his hand has he backed the trailer into the water. Boat drifts free. While the boat is freely drifting (but alongside the dock), he released the bow line and ran onto the dock and grabbed the boat by hand. Seems to me a current would have sent daughter and boat adrift...probably would have scared little girl to death. All he had to do was hold on to the bow line to prevent that. Also, 80% or more of the people don't wear PFDs. Some are smoking when starting the boat (what if the blowers were pushing out gas vapor?). Some boats were also way overloaded. Particularly a jet boat that had 8 or so people on it.
Being newbies, I know we'll be too much by-the-book boaters, especially me, Captain Cantankorus-Dad, but it seems to me some people take too many chances, even to the casual observer.
#1 observation: The book "A Complete Idiots Guide to Boating and Sailing" pretty much covers the topic well, but many people develop shortcuts that make launching faster.
#2 observation: Many of the shortcuts seem to also compromise safety. For instance, a Dad launched his boat with a very young girl (say 5 years old) in the boat alone. He held the bow line in his hand has he backed the trailer into the water. Boat drifts free. While the boat is freely drifting (but alongside the dock), he released the bow line and ran onto the dock and grabbed the boat by hand. Seems to me a current would have sent daughter and boat adrift...probably would have scared little girl to death. All he had to do was hold on to the bow line to prevent that. Also, 80% or more of the people don't wear PFDs. Some are smoking when starting the boat (what if the blowers were pushing out gas vapor?). Some boats were also way overloaded. Particularly a jet boat that had 8 or so people on it.
Being newbies, I know we'll be too much by-the-book boaters, especially me, Captain Cantankorus-Dad, but it seems to me some people take too many chances, even to the casual observer.