Seamanship_Secrets_185_Tips_-_Techniques_for_Better_Navigation-_Cruise_Planning-_and_Boat_Handling_Under_Power_or_Sail_(Re)_e..

(ff) #1

288 seamanship secrets


use a towel or scarf. A jacket or PFD protects the chest sides. To protect
the remaining zones: armpits, groin, and behind the knees (see below: Use
the H.E.L.P. survival position), you must be wearing a life jacket. A Type I
PFD/life jacket is the most eff ective PFD available (see photo).


  1. Reduce body-core immersion. Attempt to get as much of your body out of
    the water as possible. Pull yourself up onto large pieces of fl otation or fl otsam.
    Th e more body zones that you free from immersion, the slower your body
    will cool.

  2. Reduce movement. Th e University of Victoria in British Columbia conducted
    extensive tests on cold-water survival times. Th e results showed that a person
    in motion lost heat 82% faster than when still. If someone falls overboard,
    you must get a PFD to them right away. Remember, they might soon lose the
    ability to grasp an object or don a life jacket.

  3. Train your crew on in-the-water PFD donning. Show your crew how to
    don a PFD if they fall overboard. Th is requires a totally diff erent approach
    than donning one on dry land. Use a Type I or II PFD during practice. For
    more realism, get onto your knees in front of a table. Th is places the table
    top near chin height and simulates the water surface for a person in the
    water.


Th e bulky Type I life jacket off ers the best protection of your heat-loss zones. It is the only
true “life jacket” and turns an unconscious person from a face-down to a face-up position.

Free download pdf