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Coast Guard encourages smart paddling during National Safe Boating Week

May 27, 2016
The vessel types with the second and third highest percentage of boating deaths in 2015 were canoes and kayaks. The American Canoe Associated partnered with Anzovin Studio to create this video aimed at empowering kayakers and canoeists to take responsibility for their safety on the water.

CLEVELAND – During National Safe Boating Week, which began Saturday and runs through Friday, the Coast Guard 9th District is encouraging outdoor enthusiasts to paddle smart throughout the Great Lakes boating season.

According to the national 2015 Recreational Boating Statistics, the vessel types with the second and third highest percentage of boating deaths in 2015, 139 total deaths, were kayaks and canoes.

Capsizing and drowning were the causes of more than two-thirds of the paddlecraft accidents and deaths in 2015.

For this reason the Coast Guard urges paddlers to wear their life jackets at all times. Paddlecraft are prone to capsizing more easily than other vessels, and their operators should be prepared to unexpectedly enter the water at any time.

Cold water temperatures in the Great Lakes makes paddling in those bodies of water especially dangerous for people who are not appropriately dressed. Water temperature of 60 degrees F or lower is considered cold. Paddlers should dress for the water temperature to avoid drowning as a result of cold-water-shock response.

Additionally, paddlers should practice in controlled environments re-entering their vessels from the water. Many inexperienced paddlers underestimate how difficult re-entry is and find they are unable to do so after capsizing, necessitating rescues and increasing their odds of hypothermia or drowning.

Paddlers who capsize and are unable to re-enter their vessels should remain with the vessel to increase their visibility to rescuers.

The American Canoe Association offers these additional Top 10 Safety Tips, which the Coast Guard encourages all paddlers to follow.

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