Danger (sailing)
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Solutions:
- Sailing school.
I took small-boat courses to get ASA certified,
and then got a one-year membership
and sailed their boats about every other weekend. Great experience.
I considered taking a 7- or 10-day big-boat intensive class.
I think the small-boat classes worked out better.
For the same money, I got a whole summer of classes, plus
the one-year membership. About the only thing the
intensive big-boat class would have added is exposure
to what it feels like to live aboard for 7 or 10 days
(which is valuable). Everything else you can learn on
small boats or pick up once you have your own big boat.
- Safe boat.
- Safety equipment (for lightning, fire, flooding).
- Safe itinerary.
- Get experience before going on own.
- Get experienced crew.
- Never stop reading, thinking, evaluating your own performance.
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From Bill Rane, quoted on the
WorldCruising mailing list,
in response to someone's message about "world cruising and circumnavigating":
Yes, I have more open-ocean/blue water sailing experience than anyone I
know, and I consider myself the consummate world cruiser. But I must
confess something to all of you ... and please take me seriously ... I
would never, never, never consider going world cruising or undertake a
circumnavigation with a just a "couple of years" experience. That goes
for even if I were sailing in a full-time job getting that experience.
I am well aware that you are all adults and can do whatever you
want ... and that you probably will, but if your experience level is as
you describe it, I think you are thinking very dangerously. World
cruising is not a cakewalk ... it is not even easy. It is very, very
dangerous, and the only thing that makes it even remotely enjoyable is
sailing with people who know what they are doing ... who give you a
degree of comfort that if anything happens that you cannot handle,
someone on board can ...
I think dreams are wonderful ... everyone knows I have them myself, but
I am quite proud of the fact that after over 70 ocean crossings of
varying lengths, and four near-circumnavigations, I am still alive to
tell about it.
I am not trying to brag, but if you want to have a "come to Jesus"
session on this medium, tell me, and I will participate. I will tell you
stories, all true, about 80-foot waves hitting you head on the bow; I'll
tell you about being lost at sea with no navigation equipment and clouds
so thick you could not see stars if you wanted. I will tell you about
being shot at while some modern-day psycho gets his jollies at trying to
steal your boat.
If I sound like I am over-reacting, maybe I am ... but I have found two
boats in my life ... in mid-ocean ... with no crews ... each one a trip
started by novices.
And if you do decide to go, God be with you and be careful. I just ask
that you re-think your ideas ... maybe modify them a little. Go with some
experienced people first.
One serious hazard:
containers lost from freighters
But from Dave White on the SailNet liveaboard-list:
I have been sailing for over 30 years. The last fifteen have been both
across the Atlantic and Pacific. For pleasure and deliveries. I can
without question say I have never seen a container, let alone bumped into one.
Cruising/sailing is less dangerous than driving a car.
From John Cikoski on CompuServe's Sailing Forum:
... Sailing is the easy part, the pleasant part, and -- get this! -- the SAFE part.
Take it from one who's been doing it more than thirty years, the safest thing you can
do in a boat is sail it far from land.
Is there anything dangerous about living aboard in harbor while learning to
sail? Let me add a few words to your vocabulary: Anchor. Set. Rode. Chain.
Rope. Scope. Tide. Swinging. Dragging. Bowsprit. Fending off. Coral head.
Pounding. Hull breach. Grounding. Surf.
And these words: Through-hull. Electrolysis. Corrosion. Leaking. Cabin
sole. Bilge pump failure. Groping in bilge in darkness. Desperately pumping
up dinghy.
And here's a word you probably already know: hurricane. Have you ever
experienced wind over 100 MPH? There is simply no way to imagine it, so you're
probably right to refuse to think about it. ...
I suspect that sailing singlehanded (especially the danger of it)
is the biggest problem I'm facing.
I wouldn't do it if I didn't have to.
See my Sailing a Boat SingleHanded page.
Beth Leonard's "Safety Essentials"
From John Rousmaniere, in Cruising World's "Safety At Sea":
Formula for Disaster:
- Rushed, ill-considered departure.
- Potentially dangerous route.
- Lack of alternative on route.
- Unprepared or small or inexperienced crew.
- Unprepared boat.
- Crew panic after injury.
- Weak leadership.
From "Safety Offshore" article by Thomas and Vicky Jackson in 11/2000 issue of Sail magazine:
Factors in Human Error:
- Poor information (weather, navigation): must do basics right, track location and hazards.
- Fatigue: must pay attention to crew state, sleep/wake cycles.
- Inertia: changing conditions require decisions/adjustments.
- Panic: must practice/rehearse/think about emergency scenarios.
Typical sailing mistakes most beginners make (I've done the first 8 so far):
- Loose dockline or spinnaker sheet gets into propeller.
- Run aground because I didn't stop sailing when fog closed in really tight.
- Run aground because I assumed my helmsperson knew to tack to stay in channel.
- Left dock with lunch still in the car instead of in the boat.
- Let boat get overpowered (fail to reef).
- Assume the skipper knows what he's doing.
- Fail to listen to the little voice in the back of your head
saying "this is risky; it is too rough today".
- Keeping sail up through a squall or front, until it gets strong enough to damage or destroy the sail.
- Not keeping BOTH ends of all halyards secured at all times.
- Not attaching bitter end of anchor rode to boat.
- Not lined up properly (cut corner) to enter a small pass; ground on shoal at mouth of pass.
- "Short tacking" when going to weather; sometimes covering more distance is faster and easier.
- Inattentive to details (see red marker in expected place, but not check for correct number).
- Fail to notice or react to first sign of being off-course.
- Do things the hard way / ignore clues (observe other traffic, features on shore, etc).
- Steering by looking ahead only; current/wind may push you out
of channel even though you're still pointed at destination.
From Dennis Fria of Mustang Island Yachts:
... I generally have just one smart bit of advice to the folks that I've helped on
their way: Crawl, before you Walk, before you Run! Those people who start off with the hard
stuff first seldom get very far! Too frequently I see new cruisers here who want to prove
something (usually to themselves) and do so by setting out [from Texas] straight across the Gulf of Mexico
headed to Florida. And with little or no experience! And all too frequently in the winter! Now
that's just plain insane! And typically those people quit after they get to Florida! Or get a
divorce! ...
From James Baumgart on World-Cruising mailing list:
I think a useful exercise would be to produce a list of real threats that
blue water cruising crews face. Then get prepared to deal with those
threats. In my opinion, there are ways to minimize each danger. Also, in
my opinion, I've listed the most serious REALISTIC risks facing a cruising
boat. We've had all of these situations on our cruise.
(1) Grounding. Go slow, have primary and backup depth sounders, avoid
transiting coral shallows when water colors are not visible. Have adequate
gear for kedging off. Have at least 3/4 keel boat with skeg-hung rudder and
protected prop to minimize possible grounding damage. Steel boat is nice.
Don't panic. We grounded about 5 times on the year-long voyage, and towed 2
boats off sandbars along the way. Never any damage - even with exposed
props/rudders.
(2) Engine stops. Line around prop - make sure you are never dragging any
of your own lines, watch for crab pots, filter your fuel, use biocide,
change oil, change zincs, do an engine inspection daily (and hourly while
underway). Don't shut down a running diesel in a crisis or near crisis.
Install alarms. Always have mainsail ready to hoist. Always have anchor
ready to drop. A bilge pump alarm saved us when an engine cooling hose
blew, resulting in a minor $7 repair instead of an emergency rescue.
(3) Anchor dragging. Have oversized anchor and chain, use proper scope, set
two anchors when concerned about holding, always back down properly, carry
CQR/Bruce and Danforth (for different bottoms) plus a backup anchor, never
leave boat until at least 30 minutes of close observation, return if there
is a significant wind shift, carry a handheld VHF when away monitoring 16.
We also carried 250 feet of line for making boat fast to the shore if
necessary (and used it several times).
(4) Bad weather. Have SSB weather radio or weatherfax, use daily. Have
everything secure on deck at all times. If coastal cruising there is no
excuse to be caught out in bad weather - wait for good weather, be prepared
to turn back or seek alternate harbors. If blue water cruising, have strong
boat with positive righting moment capable of withstanding knockdowns.
Smaller lexan windows, bombproof hatches, oversized rigging, storm sails,
small cockpit, large drains, sufficent pumps. Get crew experienced
gradually in heavy weather sailing. Reef early. Be sure to know how to
heave to, lie ahull, or stream warps, at the appropriate times. Radar, GPS
chartplotter are technical aids, but good seamanship comes first. Carry a
knife, axe and bolt cutters capable of cutting your anchor chain.
(5) Injury. It's easy to get cut, sick, bruised, or broken. Carry adequate
first aid and medical supplies. Marine SSB or Ham radio can work wonders if
a serious medical situation happens far from help. See your doctor before
the trip and prepare a medical kit.
(6) Getting Lost. Even in the world of GPS it's easy to do. Have adequate
paper charts, acquire local knowledge. Don't overly depend on cruising
guides at the expense of your better judgement. Double-check waypoints,
it's easy to transpose digits, North versus South, 45 degrees 11 minutes
instead of 46 degrees 11 minutes (I've done both). Getting lost will
translate into threat (1) or (7).
(7) Hitting something. Usually while docking, locking, or going under a
bridge. It never happened to us but to several of our buddy boats. Not
much you can do. Bow and stern thrusters would be nice (but unaffordable).
Learn to use spring lines for maneuvering. Practice, practice, go slow.
Even then a cross current will do you in sometime. Have liability
insurance. Have an old boat that can stand a few dings and you can repair
yourself. Never insist on right-of-way. Be able to repair your longest
piece of standing rigging.
(8) Seasick. Not much you can do. It usually goes away after about 3 days
at sea. If it doesn't, look into medications or sell the boat. The
transderm patches work but cause hallucinations after a while.
The rest never happened to us.
(9) Bad People. Travel in a group. Avoid dangerous places. Keep the VHF
on 16 at all times. Having a fast boat is a good thing. We never locked
the door in 12 months and 5000 miles (except in New York City).
(10) Leaks. Carry underwater sealant, plenty of 5200, wet suit, mask.
Don't leave in the first place if your boat has serious leaks (ex. deck/hull
joint). Know how to adjust your stuffing boxes. Have softwood plugs for
the through hulls, and exercise the valves regularly. Call for help in a
bad situation. Even in a remote anchorage, people will respond. We knew of
a boat that hit rock or coral, had 3 feet of water in the bilge and more on
the way, generator under water, battery and pumps out. Local people
responded to their handheld VHF call for help, directed them to a place to
beach the boat, and brought portable pumps out, patched the hull with
underwater epoxy, towed them off, and sent them on their way to the nearest
boatyard. If this happened mid-ocean it would have been time to call Mayday
on the SSB/HAM, trigger the EPIRB, and step up into the lifeboat.
(11) Crewperson is hating it. Change what you are doing.
From "25 Dumb Things To Do on a Sailboat" in 11/2006 issue of Sail magazine:
- Sail into a harbor with the spinnaker up (looks really cool, unless you can't get it down).
- Get the dinghy painter wrapped around the prop.
- Dip a bucket overboard at 7 knots.
- Release a rope clutch without first taking turns around a winch.
- Walk along the leeward side of a (heeling) boat.
- Make a flying leap onto a dock.
- Leave the handle in the winch.
- Fend off another boat with your hands or your feet.
- Start an outboard while it's still attached to your stern rail.
- Believe that power always gives way to sail.
- Sail between a barge and its tow.
- Let go of the mooring before the skipper tells you to.
- Leave the forehatch open while you're working on the foredeck.
- Think that just one more stroke of the pump will unblock that toilet.
- Leave harbor with the sailcover on and the anchor stowed.
- Straddle a line leading to a highly loaded block.
- Anchor without first checking the chart.
- Forget to secure the bitter end of the anchor rode.
- Tow a dinghy in a big following sea.
- Go sailing without checking the weather forecast.
- Sail dead-downwind without rigging a jibe-preventer.
- Go coastal cruising without paper charts.
- Forget to open the cooling-water seacock before starting the engine.
- Pick up a mooring under mainsail when the wind and current are opposing each other.
- Get the deck fillers confused.