A
Anonymous
Guest
I work in one of the safest environments on the planet. My employer is committed to achieving 0 incidents during the next year. Our incident rate is already below.1 which is considered world class.
Long story short, I participate at an extreme level of training etc. as do all 1000 employees of this remote location.
This level of involvement has created a different culture among myself and fellow workers and we regularly trade stories from home about how this or that item learned at work was applied at home to everyones betterment.
By now your wondering what this has to do with boating? As I age and enjoy a different perspective than say 30 years ago, I am routinely looking for less painful ways to do various things. I recently completed a folding step that will fasten half way from the cockpit sole to the top of the gunnel and make that Long step shorter. Once I get it installed, I will post pictures. Right now It's still totally doable but in the near future it will seem longer and longer, hence I am taking the initiative to correct the problem before there is one.
I guess writing this was inspired, if that's a good choice of words, by the recent thread on M.O B retrieval devices. I would encourage each of you to put some thought into your own getup, young or old you will probably find room for improvement in your personal gear or methods of operation. Things happen quickly and with out vast experiences to draw from you could find yourself lacking during a tough moment! Take some time and look over everything from the ground up and ask your self could this hurt me? Weigh the risk and correct those that are most obvious. Then some other day correct another one or two.
Don't get me wrong here, I'm not an advocate of the OSHA Cowboy thing, just trying to offer some gentle prodding that may help you enjoy your boating years longer.
Mike (former boy scout) Be Prepared!
Long story short, I participate at an extreme level of training etc. as do all 1000 employees of this remote location.
This level of involvement has created a different culture among myself and fellow workers and we regularly trade stories from home about how this or that item learned at work was applied at home to everyones betterment.
By now your wondering what this has to do with boating? As I age and enjoy a different perspective than say 30 years ago, I am routinely looking for less painful ways to do various things. I recently completed a folding step that will fasten half way from the cockpit sole to the top of the gunnel and make that Long step shorter. Once I get it installed, I will post pictures. Right now It's still totally doable but in the near future it will seem longer and longer, hence I am taking the initiative to correct the problem before there is one.
I guess writing this was inspired, if that's a good choice of words, by the recent thread on M.O B retrieval devices. I would encourage each of you to put some thought into your own getup, young or old you will probably find room for improvement in your personal gear or methods of operation. Things happen quickly and with out vast experiences to draw from you could find yourself lacking during a tough moment! Take some time and look over everything from the ground up and ask your self could this hurt me? Weigh the risk and correct those that are most obvious. Then some other day correct another one or two.
Don't get me wrong here, I'm not an advocate of the OSHA Cowboy thing, just trying to offer some gentle prodding that may help you enjoy your boating years longer.
Mike (former boy scout) Be Prepared!