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3 people nearly drown in 37 degree water at the Bar
Posted: Sun Apr 07, 2013 6:57 pm
by Digitroll Fishing
You hear of people fishing (bragging) about being in in 6-8 foot waves and not seeing other boats when there in the trough of the swell. Well, 5 footers can be deadly too.
Today at the Bar the boat sank after being rescued.
http://www.buffalonews.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 09344/1010
Re: 4/7/13 3 people nearly drown in 37 degree water
Posted: Sun Apr 07, 2013 6:59 pm
by raz
Only one had a life jacket....they are very lucky to be alive indeed.
Re: 3 people nearly drown in 37 degree water at the Bar
Posted: Sun Apr 07, 2013 7:03 pm
by Digitroll Fishing
Raz,
When waves get to 5 feet we get off the pond a rule we have followed since 1981 on Lake Ontario. No fish is worth a near tragedy like what happened today.
Re: 3 people nearly drown in 37 degree water at the Bar
Posted: Sun Apr 07, 2013 7:23 pm
by Wallyandre (Andre)
Digitroll (Ron) wrote:Raz,
When waves get to 5 feet we get off the pond a rule we have followed since 1981 on Lake Ontario. No fish is worth a near tragedy like what happened today.
I totally agree on that statement!
Re: 3 people nearly drown in 37 degree water at the Bar
Posted: Tue Apr 09, 2013 9:41 pm
by fishhuntadventure
Digitroll (Ron) wrote:Raz, When waves get to 5 feet we get off the pond a rule we have followed since 1981 on Lake Ontario. No fish is worth a near tragedy like what happened today.
Well, I have never fished the "big O" but hope to some day. All I know is I accidentally got caught a couple of times with some big waves. Got off the water OK every time.
One of those few times stands out in my memory however: the morning Oneida turned from 2-footers that
were laying down good (just like the forecasts had said) to unexpected winds 25-30mph+. This produced solid 5-footers within minutes. Water was breaking over the bow repeatedly for around 45 minutes. I have not been careless on the water but I sure had to pay attention that day! I was standing in my boat holding onto the windshield frame with one hand and the helm with the other. I wasn't scared per se but I will freely admit feeling a nervous fear of losing the boat a couple of times when I lost the horizon over the bow. Which isn't that amazing except remember that I was
standing in the boat.
Glad those guys are OK but one life jacket is a little more than just dumb.