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From: <RBHoltKayak_at_aol.com>
subject: [Paddlewise] A followup rant (ignorant race-support powerboaters)
Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2000 02:00:06 EDT
Ralph, 
    I had the same experience during the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Swim, this 
June 11th.  Let me first explain to those unfamiliar with the race that the 
swimmers start on the western shore of the bay and swim in the area between 
the two spans of the bridge to the other side.  When they get to the last 
section of the bridge the swimmers have to swim under the south span and 
along an abutment to the finish line.  The distance from the last section of 
the bridge to the finish line is about 150 yards.   
    I was escorting the last swimmer (a 76 year old lady), and just as we 
were about to exit the area between the spans, one of the Boston whaler 
support boats came dangerously close to my swimmer and yelled that they were 
going to pull her because she was swimming too slow and looked tired.  I 
waved them off and said that I had been with her for all but the first 1/4 
mile, and that she was swimming steady and that she was okay.  The captain of 
the whaler backed off  for several minutes, then approached again and said 
that if she did not clear the span within two minutes they would yank her out 
of the water as per the orders of the race organizers.  I had been monitoring 
the VHF traffic and knew that this was not true.   I waved them off again and 
told them that she would make it.  Just as she swam under the bridge the 
captain again pulled dangerously close to her to prepare to pull her out of 
the water.  It was at that time that I lost my cool and yelled that they had 
better damn well leave her alone, that they should be so fortunate to be 
swimming across the bay at her age, and that I was not going to allow them to 
pull her, being that she had come this far and only had a short distance to 
the finish.  I told them that  I was going to radio the organizers if they 
didn't back off.  My threat  apparently worked because they did not harass us 
again.  
    It was almost comical during the last 150 yards.  At one point I counted  
7 (yes, seven!) power boats, sized from whalers to cabin cruisers, in a 
semicircle not less than  30 feet from my swimmer.  The noise was deafening 
and the diesel stench was almost asphyxiating.  But somehow my swimmer made 
it to the finish.  I believe her elapsed time was 4 hours and 15 minutes.  
Amazing for a 76 year old!
    Now for my real rant:  In contrast to the kayaker support which had been 
pre-briefed and  well organized by our club liaison, Mike VanDamm, the power 
boaters appeared to be disorganized, unconcerned with swimmer safety, and 
just out for a good time on the bay  (gross generalization, I know, but I 
believe accurate).  We had been told in our briefing that there would be only 
kayaks and no power boats in the area between the spans.  We (the kayakers) 
would be the first line of defense and that in the case of a distressed 
swimmer, we would tow the swimmer outside the spans to a  Boston whaler, who 
would then summon the paramedics if necessary.    It would have been a good 
plan if it had been enforced.   
    Unfortunately, the were quite a few Bozos in zodiacs that felt they had 
to zig-zag in and out between the swimmers and cross back and forth from one 
span to the other, creating a hazard for the swimmers and kayakers.  And do 
you know who most of these Bozos were?    They were members of the  volunteer 
fire departments from the various podunk waterfront communities that line the 
bay here in Maryland.  I don't mean to ignite a professional vs. volunteer 
debate, but these were just a bunch of "good 'ol boys" who should have stayed 
back at the fire house guzzling their beer and playing with Sparky.  Lets 
leave rescue work to the paid EMTs and paramedics.  And you could tell the 
difference:  the professionals stayed a respectable distance outside the span 
- and they wore PFD's!  (Granted, it may be difficult to fit a PFD over the 
beer-bellies that I saw on some of those volunteers).  Another zodiac was 
crewed by a man and what appeared to be his two 6 and 8 year-old sons.  They 
spent their time motoring  back and forth, around and between swimmers, 
seemingly unconcerned with the swimmers they were frightening.  No PFD's 
either.
    This was bad enough, but to make matters worse, the race organizers 
apparently were unconcerned that everybody with a power boat was lining up 
along the spans (thankfully, at least outside the spans).  And what a motley 
assortment of boats it was: everything from fishing boats to cabin cruisers 
to cigarette-type boats.  If there had been an emergency, all these boats 
would have surely gotten in the way of the official rescue boats.  And of 
course they were predominantly lined up on the windward side such that the 
noise and diesel fumes continually wafted over the poor swimmers.  There also 
were a number of testosterone throbbing boaters who were not content to 
simply let their engines idle: they were constantly gunning their engines and 
creating such a racket that the noise would have drowned out a swimmer crying 
for help.  
    I do not mean to diminish the efforts of all the good people who gave 
their time and money toward a worthy cause (March of Dimes), but there seemed 
to be a lack of organization and control over the power boaters.  A lot of 
these boaters seemed to forget that they were there to provide a service to 
the swimmers.  This was not a boat parade: a lot of these swimmers train long 
and hard and deserve every opportunity to finish the swim.  
      The swimmers should not be harassed by the self-centered  behavior of 
power boaters who use the opportunity to throw their weight around (the 
"captain complex"), or who  have become bored, tired, and just want to get 
back to the dock.  For some swimmers, like the one I escorted, completing the 
swim is a long held goal and would mark a milestone in their lives.
                                        Robb Holt
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From: ralph diaz <rdiaz_at_ix.netcom.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] A followup rant (ignorant race-support powerboaters)
Date: Mon, 07 Aug 2000 08:35:00 -0700
Hi Robb,

And I thought I was in an isolated Twilight Zone situation, an
aberration. :-)

I have gotten a lot of positive feedback and "hurrahs" back channel on
my post.  Some people termed me "heroic" and "I want you in the foxhole
with me."  I am flattered but I know of at least 3 or 4 of the other
kayaker escorts (including Bill Leonhardt who is on PaddleWise and got
our logo T-shirts) who would have done what I did in protecting the
woman (sans my verbal support in Spanish, which was of extra help). And
I suspect one of the kayak escorts would have boarded the motorboat and
punched out the skipper. :-)  The only kayakers who might not have stood
up as several of us would have were the first-timers at escorting who
might not have known that the captain in the motorboat had no authority.

Let me congratulate you on your stance in the Chesapeake race.  I know
exactly how you felt; lots of adrenaline, some anger and really proud to
have helped someone meet their goal.  I am not sure that all the
motorboaters really understand why they are there.

BTW, last year there was a swim here that went wrong because the
organizers had cut the timing too thin (they now consult me
religiously).  The current turned against the swimmers and legitimately
some 20 swimmers had to be pulled because it was too much for them to
fight against.  However, one swimmer seemed extra determined (I am
reporting from what people told me as I was at a wedding and couldn't be
there) and the kayakers around the guy decided to let him keep going and
stayed with him.  It was a herculean challenge but he made it.  As he
was pulled up on to the dock, the kayakers were stunned and in awe at
what they saw.  The man had no legs!  They hadn't notice the lack of leg
splash.  The kayaker who described this to me was still beaming several
weeks later.

Good going,

ralph
-- 
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Ralph Diaz . . . Folding Kayaker newsletter
PO Box 0754, New York, NY 10024
Tel: 212-724-5069; E-mail: rdiaz_at_ix.netcom.com
"Where's your sea kayak?"----"It's in the bag."
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From: Jack Fu <jack.fu_at_worldnet.att.net>
subject: (no subject)
Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2000 08:57:35 -0700
Ralph and Robb,

Is there some way you could have lodged a protest against
those over-zealous powerboat skippers?

And how about suggesting to the race organizers that they
not PAY powerboaters to be escorts, but only ask for volunteer
powerboaters?

Jack Fu
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From: ralph diaz <rdiaz_at_ix.netcom.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] A followup rant (ignorant race-support powerboaters)
Date: Mon, 07 Aug 2000 12:01:12 -0700
The NYC Swim organizers will not allow that motorboat to participate
again.  Unfortunately, they do have to give them gas money, otherwise
they won't show, at least up here.  I am not certain that the ones down
Robb's way in the Chesapeake get money.

best,

ralph

Jack Fu wrote:
> 
> Ralph and Robb,
> 
> Is there some way you could have lodged a protest against
> those over-zealous powerboat skippers?
> 
> And how about suggesting to the race organizers that they
> not PAY powerboaters to be escorts, but only ask for volunteer
> powerboaters?
> 
> Jack Fu
-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ralph Diaz . . . Folding Kayaker newsletter
PO Box 0754, New York, NY 10024
Tel: 212-724-5069; E-mail: rdiaz_at_ix.netcom.com
"Where's your sea kayak?"----"It's in the bag."
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From: Allan McLane <amcl_at_sover.net>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] A followup rant (ignorant race-support powerboaters)
Date: Mon, 07 Aug 2000 09:50:35 -0400
I completely understand your comments but I do want to offer a note of support for VFC's.

Here in Vermont there are many volunteer fire companies beause we just don't have the same level of wealth as you do in Maryland... I myself have been a volunteer for 28 years. Ours is a pure volunteer department. Many so-called volunteer departments actually pay their members to attend drills and calls; we (and only a handful of others) do not.

Let me assure you that even our youngest members understand the sober nature of our endeavor and we all act accordingly. We volunteer because there is no one else to do the job.

I have certainly seen the behaviour you describe even among paid professional crews (police, fire, and ambulance) and it sickens me when I do. 

<rant on>
Please avoid the broad-brush stereotyping... it never adds anything useful to the discussion.
<rant off>

Thanks.

--allan


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From: Steven A. Holtzman <sh_at_actglobal.net>
subject: re: [Paddlewise] A followup rant (ignorant race-support powerboaters)
Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2000 18:42:57 -0700
   >>  The NYC Swim organizers will not allow that motorboat to participate
  >>  again.  Unfortunately, they do have to give them gas money, otherwise
  >>  they won't show, at least up here.  I am not certain that the ones down
  >>  Robb's way in the Chesapeake get money.

  >>  best,

  >>  ralph

Ralph,

The least they can do is buy breakfast for the kayakers--that's our "gas money"

BTW, Great job with the racers. Down hear, the only swimmers and powerboaters I've been involved with was during a Heal the Ocean clean-up, One of the groups that I belong to (California Kayak Friends or CKF), supported a bunch of skin divers off of Santa Monica Beach last fall. Our job was to stay with the divers bubbles to assist in case of trouble and to tow them to the powerboats that were functioning as the floating garbage cans. No garbage was placed in the kayaks--only in the powerboats ;-)

Steve
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