Thanks Jack Martin for your excellent post, which has tunned by brain into another frequency of kayak safety. Most of the sea kayaking equipment, and specially the ones that deal with safety, have caveats that easily reverse their purpose and end up contributing to disaster, at least in the form of had-he/she-used- another-safety-solution-nothing-would-have-happened. I propose that we collect, for the Paddlewise archives, a list of equipment caveats that the paddling community can refer to. I will start with a few of them. PFD's: The type III PFD used in sea kayaking has a marginal 15lb of flotation, and does not keep and unconscious paddler's head out of the water. A type II PFD is designed to keep a victim's head out of the water, but it is not comfortable for paddling. An inflatable type II has amazing flotation, and is comfortble, put it requires a conscious paddler to inflate it, and has to be maintained with care. Sea seat: The idea is very good, but the absence of grab loops, and the lack of a mechanism to deflate it quickly, make it very difficult to use. It requires previous serious training, which is of no use when the energy/core temperature meter is very low. Paddlefloats: Many of the inflatable paddlefloats I have seen leak, or have punctures for rarely anyone inspects/maintains them frequently. They have great buoyancy and are virtually unsinkable. Solid paddlefloats are readily accessible, but have marginal buoyancy and sink easily. Drysuits: The gaskets need to be in good condition, and all zippers must be well maintained and fully closed. Otherwise is like no having any protection at all, or even worse as a flooded dry suit restricts the paddler's movement dramatically. Expedition Kayaks: This kayaks were made to carry heavy loads, and behave very well when the water line is where it was meant to be in their design. Many paddlers use them for day trips and are succeptible to a variety of problems --weathercocking, lack of maneuverability, "weird" stability, to name a few. Rudders: Rudders can be in the way of an effective rescue and tow. They also increase the probability of serious damage if a kayaker is hit by a kayak in the surf. As any mechanical device in sea kayaking, the paddler must learn not to depend on it. Skegs: Their deployment mechanism tends to fail when gravel or sand gets in the skeg slot. The paddler must be trained not to depend on them. Sea Wings (sponsons): Very hard to deploy by a solo paddler. They are inflatable and therefore dependent on proper care/inspection. The kayak has to be previously rigged for their use. They increase form stability only, which might not be desirable in steep waves. The increase of form stability is not dramatic, it has its limitations, and for that the paddler needs to train seriously with their use. ... your turn. Now it is time for your input. Let's make a good thread and put this in the Paddlewise homepage for the paddling community. Please feel free to add positive/not-so-positive information to items previously posted. Thanks, - Julio *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List Submissions: paddlewise_at_lists.intelenet.net Subscriptions: paddlewise-request_at_lists.intelenet.net Website: http://www.gasp-seakayak.net/paddlewise/ ***************************************************************************Received on Fri Dec 04 1998 - 12:10:19 PST
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