Interesting Things to Know
National Safe Boating Week is May 20-26: Don’t stow your life jacket: Wear it!
The simple pleasure of a summer boat ride can turn sour quickly with unexpected dangers.
Collisions, capsizing, and falls overboard are some of the more dangerous incidents that account for the 4,400 boating-related accidents and 700 deaths each year.
Among all the factors that figure into the 2,600 injuries per year — including alcohol use, leaving the boat voluntarily, high speeds, and machinery failure — there is one that figures into 83 percent of deaths: Not wearing a life jacket.
Safe boating advocates say the single most important thing you can do to prevent death and injury is to wear the jacket.
Some safe boating tips:
- Be weather-wise. Sudden winds, lightning flashes, and choppy water can mean a storm is brewing. Bring a portable radio to check the weather.
- Bring the extra gear in a container that floats, including a flashlight, extra batteries, matches, a map, flares, sunscreen, and extra sunglasses.
- Tell someone where you are going, who is with you, and how long you will be away.
- Check your boat, equipment, boat balance, engine, and fuel supply. Never overload your boat.
- Ventilate after fueling. Open the hatches, run the blower, and sniff for gasoline fumes in the fuel and engine areas before starting the engine.
- In a small boat, keep fishing and hunting gear well-packed. Bring an extra line to secure the boat or equipment.
- Stay warm and dry. Bring a waterproof covering. Never wear hip waders in a small boat.
- Be ready for higher-powered boats to pass you. Stay on your side of the channel and maintain a steady speed.
- Anchor from the bow, not the stern. Use anchor line length at least five times longer than the water depth.
Taking a safe boating course has long-lasting benefits. When you complete a course, you could earn lower boat insurance costs. In 75 percent of boating deaths in 2021, the operator completed no safety instructions.
