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Memorial Herman IRONMAN 70.3 On-Water Safety

When:
Sunday, April 6, 2014, 5:15 AM until 10:00 AM
Where:
Washington Park Boat Ramp at 61st Street and Offatts Bayou
http://ironmanlonestar.com/
1255 61st Street
Galveston, TX   77554
Additional Info:
Category:
Non-HASK Other
Registration is required
Payment In Full In Advance Only
Event run by World Triathlon Corporation.
Attendees pay for their own charges

 

 

The Event Sign-up Button below will take you to the Memorial Herman IRONMAN 70.3 website to signup.  You must sign up here!

Event Sign-up

 

 

Volunteers needed for on-water safety for the Memorial Herman Iron man 70.3

This event will consist of a 1.2 mile swim, 13.1 mile run and a 56 mile bicycle race. 


This is a Non-Hask event.  HASK has agreed to seek volunteers, but is not an organizer or sponsor of the event.


On-water safety volunteers will offer support for swimmers needing a rest or swimmers in distress.  Swimmers may also need to be directed back to the course.  You may be paddling among the swimmers to provide assistance.  Good paddling and boat control skills are required.  You may need to brace to prevent capsize when a swimmer grabs your boat.  You will normally present the bow of your kayak to the swimmer to minimize the chance of capsize.  You will need to sign a waiver when you signup. You will be covered by their insurance including liability, injury, etc.


Swimming Event

  • 1.2-miles from Moody Gardens to Colonel Paddlewheel boat dock in Offats Bayou
  • About 2700 participants starting in waves 5 minutes apart. 
  • Expect water temperature of about 72 degrees.

 

Launch and Paddle to Moody Gardens

We will put-in at the Washington Park boat ramp to Offatts Bayou off of 61st street.  From Houston:  Take I 45 South to Galveston, take the 61st Street exit onto Broadway.  Turn right on to 61st.  Travel 0.15 miles and turn right into Washington Park.   Be in the water ready to paddle at 5:45 AM.  We will paddle over to Moody Gardens as a group.  I will bring glow sticks to attach to the bow of your kayak and duct tape for mounting them.  Also bring a headlamp and/or flashlight (waterproof is best).  Our destination is the "beach" at Moody Gardens which is on the East edge of the park and just past the long Moody Gardens pier.  The distance is about 1.15 miles. This way we avoid the crowds going in and out of Moody Gardens and get to enjoy a really early morning paddle.  

 

Guidelines for Assisting Swimmers (from meeting with event leaders)

  • Be vigilante of the swimmers in your zone.  Don't get distracted by an incident you are not directly involved with.
  • Be aware of all swimmers around you when paddling among them.
  • Use throw cushion if you can't easily get to the swimmer or swimmer to you.
  • Always present the bow of your kayak to the swimmer to minimize chance of capsize.
  • Rudders should be up to reduce the chance of injury to a swimmer and to improve your maneuverability.
  • Position kayak in front of swimmers heading off course. 
  • Do not use whistle except for signaling other safety personnel as described in briefing.
  • Stay in your zone until the last swimmer goes by.  Then you can follow the swimmers to the finish.
  • Signal for assistance if you capsize and can't self-rescue. 

Hazards

We will start our paddle in the dark.  There could be boat traffic in area on the way over to Moody Gardens and back. Swimmers may be desperate or panicked as you approach them.  They can easily flip you over when grabbing onto the side of your kayak.  


 

Schedule - It is essential that you be on time for this event.

Arrive in time to be in the water ready to paddle at 5:45 AM

 

  • 5:15 – 5:45 Unload and prepare kayaks for launch
  • 5:45 -  6:15 Paddle to Moody Gardens
  • 6:15 – 6:35 Briefing on procedures and safety
  • 6:35 – 7:00 Launch and paddle to your assigned zone
  • 7:00 – 9:00 Swimming event.
  • 10:00..        Breakfast (optional) 

Gear You Bring

  • Required:  Kayak*, Paddle, PFD (must be worn). You must have a readily accessible whistle. Those with decked kayaks should have a spray-skirt and bilge pump
  • Bring if you have: VHF radio, spare paddle, tow belt, paddle float.
  • Dress appropriately for weather, conditions and water temperature (73-75 degrees)
  • Bring water, snacks, sunscreen, etc.
  • You will start padding when it is dark so bring a head lamp or flash light preferably waterproof.  Glow sticks will be provided.

*Kayak needs good flotation with sealed compartments or airbags. Decked or sit-on-tops kayak is required.

Gear Provided

  • Throw Cushion (coast guard approved)
  • VHF Radio if you don't have one
  • Glow sticks for night paddling. 


Briefing

  • Review of kayak rescue techniques
  • General strategies for support
    • Each kayaker will be assigned to work a specific area. Generally, kayakers will take the outside of the course and lifeguards the inside.
    • Stay in assigned zone
    • Stay out of swimmers way as much as possible
    • Minimize the amount of time swimmers are in contact with kayak
    • Lifeguards on jetskis will each work a zone and will oversee the kayakers and other lifeguards. They will be equipped with radios and will have contact with the course “incident commander”, medics, etc.
  • Communications
    • Three short blasts on whistle means assistance needed (typically, swimmer is hanging onto kayak and needs to be taken to shore vs short rest and continuing)
    • 1 or 2 whistle blasts used to get attention of other kayaks or guards
    • Hand Signals
      • Arm straight up with hand in a fist- need assistance
      • Touching hand to head with arm up- “everything is OK” or “understood”
      • Hands crossed over chest or over head- confirmed (witnessed) drowning
    • Assignments with lifeguard partners and zones