Quick update on the pfd purchase… I picked up the new model green online. It fits well and my only issue with it is that you have to pull it over your head… could be an issue when wearing lots of winter clothing, or if emergency response folks have to get to your chest quickly. Otherwise comfortable and functional!
Anyway after getting it Thursday I did a quick review of “how to use” it.
Saturday comes and I’m part of the local club’s canoe clinic, more by default than anything else, since the usual leaders have other plans. The class is working on an easy section of a class II, at low flow, banging micro eddies and working on stroke technique. I’m just assisting in making things happen as we move on down the river.
Half way down I set up safety at one of the more “difficult” rapids, with a salamander waist throw rope belt, more just standing there to provide feedback, than being a proactive safety. As luck would have it another open boater (Brian) stops for some photo ops… one rock away.
Things are clear with the first boat going through without issue. The second boat is bringing it on and looking good, until she catches an edge on a small submerged rock… flips and swims…. As she starts to actively self rescue, we stopped traffic and I toss the belt rope to her… and miss… (an easy toss with me just getting the rope close.. if she needs it). As she continues to swim I re-toss just missing her again.
Suddenly she stops dead in the flow by a rock with water pillowing up on it. Things are getting ugly – I re-throw the rope again and she can’t grab it as she is working hard now to stay above the surface… I’m thinking foot entrapment.
As I focus now on the re-throw, I hear her yell “…I’m on a log”… and this time the rope hits her directly, she grabs it and I go to pull … But I slip losing my footing (a typical - Slippery Rock Creek “O” moment). But then Brain, the camera boater was paying attention, and has reached out across the gap grabbing the back strap of the safety vest. One really hard pull, and the swimmer is off the log and we pull her in. Her gut hurts and is a tad shaken up but otherwise okay.
Brian and I look closely and the log is 3 to 4 inches in diameter, sticking out only 4 to 5 feet into the flow (she got stuck on the very end of it) and it is solidly stuck in place, barely visible one foot below the surface… you really have look to see even the tip of it. Later after everyone else is through the section safely I go over and try to pull the log out and find it is firmly stuck in there.
Video from Brian….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtP7m3ByHeU
Lessons learned:
1. Have gear in good working order and read up on how to use it in advance.
2. Have a throw rope handy, know how to use it, and make sure others do too….
3. Don’t take any situation too lightly... “IT” can happen quickly and at the most unsuspecting locations.
4. Having more than one person in place for safety can make a difference.
5. It’s really nice to have a victim who knows what to do in a swim / entrapment, stays calm and is able to communicate.
6. Upon replaying it in my mind a lot of things could have been done better, quicker, smarter… in the heat of the moment you do what you have to, hoping you know what to do… this time it all worked out.
Paul C.
Cboats Moderator
Official TOG Member (Team Old Guy)!