Thursday, 12 May 2011 17:23
This article re-published with permission of Ebb & Flow - The Magazine of Kayak Newfoundland and Labrador Winter 2011 - Edited by Neil Burgess
The Canadian Red Cross and Transport Canada recently published a report on boating-related deaths across Canada for 1991-2006:
Boating Immersion and Trauma Deaths in Canada: 16 Years of Research. This article will highlight the findings of particular interest to kayakers in Newfoundland.
Over the 16-year period, the number of Canadians who died in boating-related accidents was 2,765 (or about 173 people per year). Only 3% of these deaths were kayakers and 22% were canoeists. The situations associated with fatalities among recreational boaters (immersion and trauma deaths alike) were capsizing (39%), falling overboard (25%), swamping (12%), and colliding (8%). Fifty-nine percent of these deaths were associated with powerboats and 36% were associated with human-powered boats like kayaks, canoes and rowboats.
As we have known for a while, small open motor boats and canoes are most frequently involved in immersion deaths (drowning and hypothermia), while trauma deaths (injury) result most often from use of personal watercraft (jet skis), large powerboats, and small open fishing boats.
Immersion deaths in recreational boating were associated mostly (58%) with capsizing (over-turning) in human-powered boats. Across Canada, canoeing accidents caused 4½ times more immersion deaths than kayaking accidents.
Now let’s look more closely at kayaking accidents. Between 1991 and 2006, 77 fatalities were linked to kayaks in Canada. Of these deaths, 76 were due to immersion and only one was due to trauma. In Newfoundland and Labrador during this 16-year period, there were 112 recreational boating fatalities and of these, five were kayakers.
Read more...