Datawiz said.. o
By myself I use jack lines and harness with crutch strap and that's even when in the harbour ( yes I look like a d@ck head ) but if I don't get used to wearing it when it's calm I'm sure when it's rough it's ten times harder .
You don't look like a d@ckhead - you look like a sailor acknowledging the risks and taking responsibility for his own safety. Hopefully, the days of the unwarranted macho image that some emotionally immature yobbos like to attach to sailing are fading, as they get a bit more real.
regards,
Allan
Without wanting to be too controversial, let's look at it this way.
The last time (as far as I can recall) anyone was killed going overboard from a yacht in Sydney was about 1999. Since then, according to the Gemba report, there would have been something like 6 million individual sailing days on the Harbour, with (as far as I know) any death.
Therefore a typical person on the Harbour has a one in six million chance of being killed through going overboard. That is an incredibly tiny chance - about the same chance as being killed by walking 6 km, if I have my sums right. So how much safety equipment do we have nearby when walking 6ks? Most Sydney sailors would seem to have as much chance of being hit by an asteroid as they have of being killed by falling overboard on the harbour, according to what I can see from NASA and the Gemba report.
Therefore, competent sailors who do not normally wear protective gear on the harbour are NOT "emotionally immature yobbos", but rational people who understand the risks.
Do you wear safety equipment to protect you from other risks that are in the region of 6 million to one? Have you seen how much safer you would be wearing a bicycle helmet sitting down to dinner at home? That will almost certainly reduce your death of an early death much more than wearing a harness etc on a typical day on the harbour!
PS - I think the last sailor to die after going overboard in Sydney was hit by the boom - arguably if you are going to wear a harness you should also wear a helmet since the risks of death by each are probably roughly similar. And of course not neither of them are anywhere near as likely as having a heart attack.