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From: Colin Calder <c.j.calder_at_abdn.ac.uk>
subject: [Paddlewise] Assisted rescue technique
Date: Fri, 22 May 1998 12:28:32 +0100
Hi All

A couple of weeks ago I was shown an assisted rescue by a chap called
Donald Thompson, which I hadn't seen or heard of before. I don't know
whether anyone other than Donald has developed this rescue, but I was very
impressed and consider this technique to be the fastest method I've tried
for emptying a wet exit victim's boat in deep water.

The rescue is basically a T rescue, deviating from standard at points 4-7:

1. Get the victim holding on to your bow toggle.
2. Right the victims boat but do not attempt to drain it at this stage.
3. Hold the swamped boat's bow toggle and manoeuvre the boat 90º to your own.

4. ***This is the clever bit*** If the victims boat is on your right, hold
the bow toggle firmly in your left hand. Now simply capsize away from the
swamped boat, holding its bow toggle by your chest, until you are lying
horizontally on the surface of the water and your boat is ***completely***
on edge - the momentum of  your body leaning to the water, your boat's hull
rotation, and the shape of the swamped boats bow lifts the victims boat's
bow so that it slides effortlessly up and over your kayak, finishing with
the swamped boats bow by your head and over your boats right hand freeboard
(or vice versa if you are performing the rescue on your left). The more
confidently you throw yourself over, the less effort is involved - the
swamped boat provides tremendous stability.
5. With your free right hand rotate the victims boat towards you - its
cockpit is clear of the water and drains completely. 
6. Rotate the now empty boat to upright.
7. Hip snap up/push the victims bow back to the water. Again this is
effortless, as the victims boat sliding off does most of the work.

8. Swing the victims stern to your bow, raft up and return the victim to
their boat.

I tried this rescue with a variety of boats, and was extremely impressed
with the ease, stability, and speed that it can be performed. It may sound
complicated, but is very very simple to perform. It will work well with any
boat with a rear bulkhead (preferably sloping/close to the cockpit), bow
toggle, and anything but a completely square bow profile (for some
unfathomable reason Knordkapps seem to have been attracting a bit of abuse
recently on this list, but trying this out their high rounded bows provided
the ideal boat shape for this rescue). After about ten minutes practice
with this technique the sequence 4-6 above become one fluid movement with
which I could empty a swamped boat in literally about 5 seconds. 

As I see it the advantages with this rescue are:

You do not need any assistance from the victim, who is always visible to you
It is blisteringly quick
It is almost effortless
It is very stable
The victims boat does not interfere with any deck mounted equipment you may
have
You do not interfere with any deck mounted equipment the victim may have
Very simple to learn and perform

Hope this is of interest/understandable - If you haven't tried this rescue
I can not recommend it more highly.

Cheers








Colin Calder
57º19'N  2º10'W 
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From: Rich Kulawiec <rsk_at_gsp.org>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Assisted rescue technique
Date: Fri, 22 May 1998 07:47:30 -0400
On Fri, May 22, 1998 at 12:28:32PM +0100, Colin Calder wrote:
> A couple of weeks ago I was shown an assisted rescue by a chap called
> Donald Thompson, which I hadn't seen or heard of before. I don't know
> whether anyone other than Donald has developed this rescue, but I was very
> impressed and consider this technique to be the fastest method I've tried
> for emptying a wet exit victim's boat in deep water.

This is somewhat similar to what some paddlers I know call the "Hand of God"
rescue -- I suppose it got the name, because to the rescuee, it feels like
something reached out of the sky and popped them upright.

The way the H-o-G rescue works is that paddler A falls over and misses
his/her roll.  Paddler B approaches the A's boat -- with A still in it
and upside down and comes up parallel to it.  B reaches over the
upside-down hull of A's boat and grabs the cockpit rim, then pulls
it up, flipping B back upright.  For additional leverage, B can flip
towards A's boat (being careful not to smack their head into A's hull)
which will allow them to use their entire body weight to hoist A up.
B then lets go of A's boat and rolls up.

I've seen this done, but it only works well if B weighs a lot more than A.
And manages to grab the cockpit rim without popping the sprayskirt off. ;-)

---Rsk
Rich Kulawiec
rsk_at_gsp.org
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From: John C. Winskill <johncw_at_narrows.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Assisted rescue technique
Date: Fri, 22 May 1998 15:12:28 -0700
Colin;
I've heard referance to it before but never tried it.  Good description.
I'm teaching a cold water rescue clinic tomorrow so I'll give it a try
and get back to you on it.
John Winskill

Colin Calder wrote:
> 
> Hi All
> 
> A couple of weeks ago I was shown an assisted rescue by a chap called
> Donald Thompson, which I hadn't seen or heard of before. I don't know
> whether anyone other than Donald has developed this rescue, but I was very
> impressed and consider this technique to be the fastest method I've tried
> for emptying a wet exit victim's boat in deep water.
> 
> The rescue is basically a T rescue, deviating from standard at points 4-7:
> 
> 1. Get the victim holding on to your bow toggle.
> 2. Right the victims boat but do not attempt to drain it at this stage.
> 3. Hold the swamped boat's bow toggle and manoeuvre the boat 90º to your own.
> 
> 4. ***This is the clever bit*** If the victims boat is on your right, hold
> the bow toggle firmly in your left hand. Now simply capsize away from the
> swamped boat, holding its bow toggle by your chest, until you are lying
> horizontally on the surface of the water and your boat is ***completely***
> on edge - the momentum of  your body leaning to the water, your boat's hull
> rotation, and the shape of the swamped boats bow lifts the victims boat's
> bow so that it slides effortlessly up and over your kayak, finishing with
> the swamped boats bow by your head and over your boats right hand freeboard
> (or vice versa if you are performing the rescue on your left). The more
> confidently you throw yourself over, the less effort is involved - the
> swamped boat provides tremendous stability.
> 5. With your free right hand rotate the victims boat towards you - its
> cockpit is clear of the water and drains completely.
> 6. Rotate the now empty boat to upright.
> 7. Hip snap up/push the victims bow back to the water. Again this is
> effortless, as the victims boat sliding off does most of the work.
> 
> 8. Swing the victims stern to your bow, raft up and return the victim to
> their boat.
> 
> I tried this rescue with a variety of boats, and was extremely impressed
> with the ease, stability, and speed that it can be performed. It may sound
> complicated, but is very very simple to perform. It will work well with any
> boat with a rear bulkhead (preferably sloping/close to the cockpit), bow
> toggle, and anything but a completely square bow profile (for some
> unfathomable reason Knordkapps seem to have been attracting a bit of abuse
> recently on this list, but trying this out their high rounded bows provided
> the ideal boat shape for this rescue). After about ten minutes practice
> with this technique the sequence 4-6 above become one fluid movement with
> which I could empty a swamped boat in literally about 5 seconds.
> 
> As I see it the advantages with this rescue are:
> 
> You do not need any assistance from the victim, who is always visible to you
> It is blisteringly quick
> It is almost effortless
> It is very stable
> The victims boat does not interfere with any deck mounted equipment you may
> have
> You do not interfere with any deck mounted equipment the victim may have
> Very simple to learn and perform
> 
> Hope this is of interest/understandable - If you haven't tried this rescue
> I can not recommend it more highly.
> 
> Cheers
> 
> Colin Calder
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From: Kirk Olsen <kolsen_at_imagelan.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Assisted rescue technique
Date: Tue, 26 May 1998 10:08:37 -0400 (EDT)
Nice rescue.  I tried it I liked it.  I think it would even be easy
for a non-rolling paddler to do this, but there will probably be some 
confidence issues to getting a non-roller to commit to it...

kirk

> Colin Calder wrote:
> > 
> > Hi All
> > 
> > A couple of weeks ago I was shown an assisted rescue by a chap called
> > Donald Thompson, which I hadn't seen or heard of before. I don't know
> > whether anyone other than Donald has developed this rescue, but I was very
> > impressed and consider this technique to be the fastest method I've tried
> > for emptying a wet exit victim's boat in deep water.
> > 
> > The rescue is basically a T rescue, deviating from standard at points 4-7:
> > 
> > 1. Get the victim holding on to your bow toggle.
> > 2. Right the victims boat but do not attempt to drain it at this stage.
> > 3. Hold the swamped boat's bow toggle and manoeuvre the boat 90º to your own.
> > 
> > 4. ***This is the clever bit*** If the victims boat is on your right, hold
> > the bow toggle firmly in your left hand. Now simply capsize away from the
> > swamped boat, holding its bow toggle by your chest, until you are lying
> > horizontally on the surface of the water and your boat is ***completely***
> > on edge - the momentum of  your body leaning to the water, your boat's hull
> > rotation, and the shape of the swamped boats bow lifts the victims boat's
> > bow so that it slides effortlessly up and over your kayak, finishing with
> > the swamped boats bow by your head and over your boats right hand freeboard
> > (or vice versa if you are performing the rescue on your left). The more
> > confidently you throw yourself over, the less effort is involved - the
> > swamped boat provides tremendous stability.
> > 5. With your free right hand rotate the victims boat towards you - its
> > cockpit is clear of the water and drains completely.
> > 6. Rotate the now empty boat to upright.
> > 7. Hip snap up/push the victims bow back to the water. Again this is
> > effortless, as the victims boat sliding off does most of the work.
> > 
> > 8. Swing the victims stern to your bow, raft up and return the victim to
> > their boat.
> > 
> > I tried this rescue with a variety of boats, and was extremely impressed
> > with the ease, stability, and speed that it can be performed. It may sound
> > complicated, but is very very simple to perform. It will work well with any
> > boat with a rear bulkhead (preferably sloping/close to the cockpit), bow
> > toggle, and anything but a completely square bow profile (for some
> > unfathomable reason Knordkapps seem to have been attracting a bit of abuse
> > recently on this list, but trying this out their high rounded bows provided
> > the ideal boat shape for this rescue). After about ten minutes practice
> > with this technique the sequence 4-6 above become one fluid movement with
> > which I could empty a swamped boat in literally about 5 seconds.
> > 
> > As I see it the advantages with this rescue are:
> > 
> > You do not need any assistance from the victim, who is always visible to you
> > It is blisteringly quick
> > It is almost effortless
> > It is very stable
> > The victims boat does not interfere with any deck mounted equipment you may
> > have
> > You do not interfere with any deck mounted equipment the victim may have
> > Very simple to learn and perform
> > 
> > Hope this is of interest/understandable - If you haven't tried this rescue
> > I can not recommend it more highly.
> > 
> > Cheers
> > 
> > Colin Calder
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