At sea, you never go out on the deck without your harness attached to a 
lifeline, period.
When the weather gets rough, you have to be attached in the cockpit too.
The idea that someone would rely on a 100 feet line to grab is, sorry, wishful 
thinking. At six knots, the boat is doing 10 feet per second. The 100 feet line 
is gone in ten second max. Picture this, go overboard, get back to the surface 
and get oriented a bit. Better start swimming damn fast, you got only one try, 
if any, even in daytime in calm sea. I wouldn't rely on this even with a 300 
feet line.
Actually, when single handled, not only are you attached, but most of your 
thinking goes into insuring that you don't even get thrown overboard. Because, 
even when attached to the boat, the prospect to get back on board is far, far 
from being granted. Your mind goes into finding ways to ensure that, in the 
case you loose your balance and fall, you wouldn't fall overboard: shorter 
tether line, attaching the tether on windward side, installing a lifeline that 
run in the center of the boat rather than on the sides...
In all due respect, please forget the idea of trying to grab a line. If you 
have any doubt please do the following: next summer, fully clothed with all the 
weather gear and the inflatable vest, through yourself over board at anchor and 
try to swim just ten feet in ten seconds. 

Personally, I prefer to rethink the lifeline system such as lines running over 
the cabin top. runways on the side are nice in fair weather. In my view, 
runways are not the only places where lifelines should be installed. Ensure 
that your inflatable vest is really comfortable and adjusted, easy to put over 
your weather cloths.
Happy New Year.

Antoine (C&C 30 Cousin)

Le 2014-01-01 à 21:28, Eric Frank a écrit :

> With the recent interest on this list-serve about inflatable vests and 
> tethers, and the comments that going overboard when single-handed is unlikely 
> to have a good outcome, I have been thinking about possible ways to improve 
> the chances of self-rescue.  My father always trailed a 100 foot 
> polypropylene line (so it would float) off the stern, with a knot at the end. 
>  He hoped to be able to grab that and then haul himself back to the stern 
> transom.  Of course a ladder off the stern would be crucial, which he did not 
> have.  But as this list-serve has noted, it is very unlikely that one would 
> be strong enough to pull along the line back to the boat unless the boat were 
> nearly stationary.
> 
> Would it be possible to rig a drogue (sea anchor?) in a bag on the stern so 
> that when you pull the line trailing off the stern, the drogue would deploy?  
> I have no experience using drogues or sea anchors, but are they capable of 
> slowing the boat, with sails full, to a knot or two?  That might be slow 
> enough to enable one to pull oneself back to the boat.  The stern ladder 
> would also need a cord to pull so that it would fold down, and be deep enough 
> so that 1 or 2 steps would be underwater.  The larger drogues are 6 – 8 feet 
> in diameter, so that might be sufficient.  One could also rig a trip line to 
> the engine so if it were running, it would stop.
> 
> This idea must have occurred to many others, but I have never seen it 
> proposed.  Obviously one would rig the drogue bag and stern line only when 
> single handing – not racing.  But the bags I have seen for full-sized sea 
> anchars are not huge, so it would not take up a lot of space behind the 
> helmsman.  Has this been tried?  Do any of you have experience with deploying 
> large drogues and seeing how slowly the boat moves?  If I had one, it would 
> be interesting to try it out on a warm day and with plenty of help around.
> 
> Eric Frank
> Cat's Paw
> C&C 35 Mk II
> Mattapoisett, MA
> 
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