jay_merrill
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2007
- Messages
- 5,653
Once again, a waterman has been lost to a preventable accident.
I don't have full details at this point, but it appears that the man was attempting to remove an entangled shrimp net from the prop of his trawler. He was the captain of the vessel and went overboard without a PFD, in an attempt to swim under the boat. His intention was apparently to cut the net off of the wheel and shaft.
The location of the boat at the time was in an area called "the Rigolets." It is basically the mouth of Lake Ponchartrain and experiences heavy tidal flow. I received word of the man overboard at about 2am this morning, but couldn't launch because I had "dad duty." When I spoke to the Sector New Orleans ops supervisor, however, he told me that they believed the current had swept the man away from the boat very quickly. That theory seems to have been confirmed by a news report this morning, stating that he went under once and never came up. His body was located by search crews three miles "downstream," about two hours after the SAR effort was launched.
As someone said to me in a PM the other day, the most important safey item we have on our boats is our brain. Obviously, the lesson here is that trying to swim in heavy currents presents a very real danger, and should not be attempted by someone without the proper training and equipment to do so safely.
I don't have full details at this point, but it appears that the man was attempting to remove an entangled shrimp net from the prop of his trawler. He was the captain of the vessel and went overboard without a PFD, in an attempt to swim under the boat. His intention was apparently to cut the net off of the wheel and shaft.
The location of the boat at the time was in an area called "the Rigolets." It is basically the mouth of Lake Ponchartrain and experiences heavy tidal flow. I received word of the man overboard at about 2am this morning, but couldn't launch because I had "dad duty." When I spoke to the Sector New Orleans ops supervisor, however, he told me that they believed the current had swept the man away from the boat very quickly. That theory seems to have been confirmed by a news report this morning, stating that he went under once and never came up. His body was located by search crews three miles "downstream," about two hours after the SAR effort was launched.
As someone said to me in a PM the other day, the most important safey item we have on our boats is our brain. Obviously, the lesson here is that trying to swim in heavy currents presents a very real danger, and should not be attempted by someone without the proper training and equipment to do so safely.