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BOATERS
CAN
LEARN
FROM
CREW
OVERBOARD
RESCUE
SYMPOSIUM
Going
overboard
is
every
recreational
boater’s
worst
nightmare.
Nearly
200
lives
were
lost
in
2004
alone
due
to
falls
overboard.
However,
if
someone
does
go
over
the
side,
a
crew
that
knows
the
latest
rescue
methods
and
has
the
right
retrieval
gear
will
be
able
to
make
a
quick
rescue
according
to
a
final
report
from
the
Crew
Overboard
Rescue
Symposium.
At
the
Symposium,
held
August
9-12,
2005
on
San
Francisco
Bay
and
funded
in
part
by
the
BoatU.S.
Foundation,
115
volunteers
conducted
almost
400
tests
of
40
types
of
rescue
gear
and
many
maneuvers.
Using
volunteer
“victims”
who
went
into
the
water,
testers
addressed
questions
like,
“What’s
the
best
way
to
make
contact
with
the
victim?”,
“What
methods
work
best
for
bringing
a
victim
back
on
deck?”,
“Is
there
any
chance
of
rescuing
an
unconscious
victim?”,
and “Do
swim
platforms
help
or
hinder
rescue?”
The
final
report
includes
information
keyed
to
different
types
of
power
and
sailboats
involved
in
a
recovery.
Also
included
is
a
“lessons
learned”
section
with
comments
from
symposium
organizers,
who
between
them
have
a
total
of
nearly
200
years
of
recreational
boating
experience.
The
report’s
author,
nautical
journalist
John
Rousmaniere
and
a
member
of
the
organizing
committee,
says,
“Rarely
do
rescue
equipment
and
maneuvers
undergo
this
kind
of
comparative
testing
in
public
trials
under
conditions
that
typically
prevail
when
people
fall
over
the
side.”
Testing
was
done
on
15
sailboats
and
powerboats
of
nearly
every
type
(including
multihulls)
in
conditions
that
ranged
from
flat
seas
to
35-knot
blows.
Ruth
Wood,
president
of
the
BoatU.S.
Foundation
and
a
member
of
the
organizing
committee,
says
about
the
final
report,
“Everything
we
learned
was
relevant
to
the
your
average
recreational
boater,
such
as
the
importance
of
practicing
overboard
maneuvers
and
the
challenges
some
boat
designs
present
when
trying
to
recover
a
victim.
We
hope
that
by
sharing
this
easy-to-read
report
more
boaters
will
make
smarter
decisions
and
improve
their
chances
for
successfully
recovering
a
guest,
family
member,
or
crew
from
the
water.”
Click here
to download PDF version of final report (1MB)
Click here
to download MS Word version of final report (8MB)
Click
here to view the BoatU.S. Magazine article and photo gallery.
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