Wow! That stirred things up! Actually, I'm not advocating legislation, but that's often the way countries go when there seen to be too many accidents by the almighty media. I wondered if it's happening there. I agree that it's unenforceable and will not stop accidents. Sorry about my geographical ignorance. I'm all in favour of avoiding shrinkage of Canada. In Switzerland, law does not restrict access to mountains or activities in mountains. The situation is similar to your situation with kayaks on your coastal waters I would say. I see one reason for this as being the banalisation of "extreme" sports. People watch it on TV, it's shown as heroic, the message quickly comes across that "you can do it too" - and it's left right there. There is no indication of how to go about preparing yourself for safely enjoying that sport. No advice of which club or organisation is out there and no yardstick to show the difference between the person you just saw perform skilfully and what a complete novice might have done wrong in the same situation. Here, we've had and are having this with high mountain climbing, rock climbing, skiing, canyoning and more besides. One interesting thing here, the mountain rescue here is performed by a collaboration between a publicly financed private helicopter company and the Swiss Alpine Club, who's members are volunteers selected amongst the most competent alpinists. This allays some of the "why should we pay" argument. For the anecdote, on kayak and marine safety here; a kayak is considered to be a "beach device" and as such may not exceed 300m from the shore. The problem was windsurfers who cross the lake, 15 km or more, who also have "beach devices". This law has now been changed, so now, if I have a bailer, a compass, a PFD and a red flag for signalling for help, I may now cross the lake. I wanted better than that. I wanted a VHF. I asked the lake rescue people if that was useful here and they said "yes we monitor channel 16 day and night". So, I asked the OFCOM - Swiss federal regulatory branch - how to go about getting a licence. They explained that I must pass an operators exam and then pay a licence. They also explained that I would not be allowed to use my radio in Switzerland! This is because the military, police and fire services are using those frequencies. What really hurts is, if I drive around the lake to France and put the boat in the water, the French authorities insist that I MUST have a VHF if I paddle further than 300m from the land. Which kind of forces me to have an unlicenced radio, if I want to take safety seriously. Cheers, Kevin. *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List - Any opinions or suggestions expressed here are solely those of the writer(s). You must assume the entire responsibility for reliance upon them. All postings copyright the author. Submissions: PaddleWise_at_PaddleWise.net Subscriptions: PaddleWise-request_at_PaddleWise.net Website: http://www.paddlewise.net/ ***************************************************************************Received on Tue Apr 16 2002 - 22:58:40 PDT
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