I do a lot of fishing in remote areas and always carry plenty of safety gear and double up on most of it including an extra radio as well as a spare prop, anchor, chain and rope'
I also carry a basic tool kit, spare fuel filter, folding solar panel, extra water, some dry/tinned food, brew gear and a small gas cooker.
All up about an extra 40kg of extra weight on the boat But it is all easily and neatly stowed away even on a small 4.6m tinny.
I have been out on the water both professionally and for leisure for over 50 years now and have Never had to be rescued But that doesn't mean that it won't ever happen and the safety gear I carry Will save mine and my passengers lives IF the **** ever hit the fan.
Lack of or poor maintenance on boats is very common especially on out board motors, batteries and wiring which are the cause of many sea rescues and then we have the fools that forget to make sure they have enough fuel that are forever running out at sea.
You only get one shot at life, Aim well
2004 D2 "S" V8 auto, with a few Mods gone
2007 79 Series Landcruiser V8 Ute, With a few Mods.
4.6m Quintrex boat
20' Jayco Expanda caravan gone
Whether it was arrogance, stupidity or "mind your own business", what they failed to realise is that other people had to put their lives at risk, or put on hold, to go and look for them. And that is just is just the volunteers. The cost to the tax payer has not been published, but it would probably run into several hundred thousand dollars.
Many years ago the sea rescue group that I was involved with installed a small "letter box" and a stack of cards that boat owners could fill in with details of where roughly they were going, how many POB, and approximate ETA of return , etc. The box was right at the only boat ramp in town, and as normally a trailer would be involved, it was a simple matter at the end of the day for somebody to go and clear the box and check the cards against any trailers still at the ramp. Members of the group were rostered to go and clear the box, at their own cost and time, and there were always some boat owners that knew better and would not fill in a card. In fact, some members of the group were abused on occasion when they questioned an owner about not bothering to fill in a card. This of course was in the days before reliable radios.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-09-...-boat/12653378
No alert because they were 'not lost'
The search covered more than 120,000 square kilometres, with help from the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, the Royal Australian Air Force and Kangaroo Island and Volunteer Marine Rescue, as well as police.
The Margrel did not fire off any flares or activate its Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (EPIR, leading police to suspect it did not have the emergency gear on board.
But Mr Higgins said that was because they did not consider themselves lost and had "back-up plan on back-up plan on back-up plan".
He was fined $1,000 for having an out-of-date EPIRB and for only having expired flares on board.
Motor? You have a Motor? Are you some sort of Posh Git James?Not being able to get help if it is 'really needed' makes me check my safety kit is all up to scratch before the motor starts
Edit. I believe that is the same area where a family of four Victorians?? disappeared in the last few years.
I called into my Dentist one day & there was a bloke in there describing to the Staff how he knew there was deep trench offshore & believed that is where they would be found. Apparently it doesn't appear on electronic gear (according to him). That sounded like a bit of bull**** but of course you never know.
One theory was, & I haven't caught up with anything further, that one of the adults had discovered they had a life threatening illness & they decided to take their own lives. Dairy Farmer Family from SW Vic if I recall. Supposedly a very tricky area
Haven't read or heard anything since then about them. Talk about going to Davy Jones Locker en masse.
[QUOTE]checked before I leave my house to be honest. /QUOTE]
You have a house as well? A proper house? You really are a Posh Git.
[
Got me there. I do like paddling with no engine or swimming speedo's and googles only a few km from shore. The Great Whites, Makos Thresher and Blues sharks I see when out with a motor on do make me wonder about that habit
Life Jacket now is worn now as well in my little canoe . I did used to frequently only wear a wetsuit only when in a very small boat several thousand km from shore at times. A habit I brought in to civilian life when sub 5km from shore still.

He is saying, in shark speak of course, "I'm gonna get you one day young Jim".
Why more people "who go down to the sea in ships" don't automatically don PFD as a matter of course I don't know. No good hurriedly scounging around amongst all the surplus boat **** when the ship is going down. "Oh **** how do I wear this thing"
James it's not him you should be bothered about, just stay clear of Gibraltar.Killer whales launch ‘orchestrated’ attacks on sailing boats | Marine life | The Guardian
I would point out that I have sailed offshore for the last fifty years (but not to any extent in the last fifteen). In that period I have had two alarms about me, both by wives of a crew member. The first was actually on Moreton Bay, and when she raised the alarm, was informed that "If it is a sailing boat (it was) I would not worry - the bay bis like a mirror, and there is not a breath of wind".
The second was in Bass Strait, and we were a day late returning to Westernport due to adverse winds - this was before mobile phones, we did not have HF radio and there was no VHF coverage until well into the bay.
My only real experience of an actual emergency, was not our emergency, but that of another yacht which had lost its rudder in rough seas off the Glennie Group in Bass Strait. We took it in tow, and towed it to Refuge Cove on Wilsons Prom. By then VHF coverage had improved, both boats had VHF, as did the rescue helicopter which turned out not to be needed. If we had not been nearby, in another hour or so they would have been on the rocks.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
Sydney to Hobart train wreak 98 would rank as a WOW in the sailing sense. RIP sailors
Give some idea of the power those who have sailed know is so much bigger than us. Yet we keep sailing and blue water allure is compelling.
Suspect my wow plus beside ghosts of my recovery jobs, is still our amazing Great Australian Bight. Words cannot describe what I saw. Just imagine the MCG disappearing in front of you, reappearing and disappearing again and again and again..... and you have a smidgen of an idea of the wonder our oceans gifted me.
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