That's exactly the attitude, Don. If you go over the side, you are mostly 
likely going to have to pop off the tether on your harness to avoid drowning 
while being dragged through the water. I always thing of my harness and tether 
as a device to keep me on the boat at sea. I avoid going up the leeward side 
and clipping in on the leeward side. I try to work with my tether stretched 
uphill as much as possible.
Here might be the time for a few comments about snap hooks. I have removed to 
preventer that stops it opening easily on mine. I have tried many different 
carabiners over the years and found opening the ORC approved hooks to almost 
always require two hands to open. Pair that with numb fingers and heavy gloves 
and you've got a problem. 

Andy
C&C 40
Peregrine

Andrew Burton
61 W Narragansett
Newport, RI 
USA    02840

http://sites.google.com/site/andrewburtonyachtservices/
+401 965-5260

On Dec 29, 2013, at 9:39, Don Siddall <siddal...@gmail.com> wrote:

> When racing a number of years ago I pulled in a few people from another boat. 
> Despite a young strong experienced crew it was a "learning experience". So 
> for me the rule now is "don't leave the boat". When out with just my wife I 
> feel comfortable only when I am firmly clipped in. The tether on my 
> inflatable, for me, is more important than the flotation.
> 
> Don
> 
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