Swim with a line tied to the back of the boat. I have no idea what the currents 
and winds are in the Great Lakes, but if you have a long line tied to your back 
cleat and just swim behind the boat, you should be fine. 
Amy

--- On Wed, 3/24/10, Ron Ginter <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Ron Ginter <[email protected]>
Subject: [IC27A] swimming from the boat?
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, March 24, 2010, 8:18 AM


  



Ok, this is probably a really stupid question. Back in the olden days when I 
was on a race crew in Lake Erie, there was the odd time when we would abandon a 
race due to lack of wind, and just go swimming. I was an invincible teenager at 
the time, and never thought about anything that could go wrong.

If the boat is just drifting, is there a chance that it could drift away from 
someone who has just jumped into the water? Would any current in the water 
affect the boat and the swimmer much the same? Could an average swimmer 
overcome it and "catch up" to the boat? The obvious solution is to drop anchor, 
but I have discovered to my dismay that much of Lake Ontario is too deep, 
unlike Lake Erie.

I'd only be interested in swimming on a hot calm day. Also, it probably 
wouldn't be a bad idea to jump in and float around in a PFD once in a while as 
a test. I have this mental image of coming up out of the water only to see the 
boat receding into the distance.

Any thoughts?

...Ron







      

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