I have a drogue cone used to prevent a following seaway from broaching  
Sovereignty.  When I go swimming I drop it overboard.  It prevents an  opposing 
current and wind from separating me from the boat.  I also toe a  
polypropylene line with loops tied in it.  I generally wear a ski belt or  two 
when I 
go swimming in open water.
 
David Hoyt
Sovereignty
Catalina 27 #65
ahsovereignty.com
 
 
In a message dated 3/24/2010 10:23:24 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
 
 
We keep square floatation cushions for comfort on deck; when swimming,  
we'll tie a few of these to some lines and toss them into the water. They make  
easy targets to swim after if we see the boat getting away from us, which 
it  usually does since the boat has higher wind resistance than our bobbing 
heads  do. :) But that's just here on Lake Michigan, where we generally don't 
have  much in the way of currents.  


Regardless though, we pretty much always leave someone on board who can  
control the boat for the safety of the swimmers.


In recent years, swimming in the harbor at dock has been much less  yucky.


David

On Wed, Mar 24, 2010 at 8:46 AM, John Jennings <_johnwjenni...@johnwjennin_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) >  wrote:


 
 
 
Several years ago a young man went swimming on the Chesapeake Bay while  
his girl friend stayed in the boat as it floated away with the tide.   She did 
not know how to operate the boat and rescue him.  He did not  make it.
 
John J.  



Mar 24, 2010 09:31:50 AM, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])  wrote:




 
 
 
Use life sling/nylon/Use life sling/nylon/<WBR>ski tow rope... so that it 
floats  in the water. I always hooked up a few lines off the back a

Derek.-




 
____________________________________
 From: Amy 
To: [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
Sent: Wed, March 24, 2010 8:36:27  AM
Subject: Re: [IC27A]  swimming from the boat?



 
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 wrote:



From: Ron Ginter  
Subject: [IC27A] swimming from the boat?
To:  ic...@yahoogroups. com
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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