Looks like it could be a gas leak or carbon monoxide. (Note to self- install CO alarm sitting in locker.)
www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-11/bodies-of-two-men-found-on-boat-in-hobart-prince-of-wales-bay/7080174
That's very sad.
Hopefully we will hear further on this one. I suspect a petrol suitcase type of generator. It's just so easy to kill yourself!
I would doubt that is what anybody around here is saying.
Yes I agree. I have no doubt at all that no one posting here would even consider that idea.
Not a thoughtful comment seahorse9 !
So what you're saying is that there is a boat going cheap in Hobart? Silver lining, I guess.
HUH??????
An incredibly poor and inappropriate attempt at black humour or unfathomably macabre.
Posted this before but though it is fairly relevant to this unfortunate event, that may have been prevent for the cost of a simple CO detector.
CO - the silent killer. After reading stories about Carbon Monoxide poisoning a CO Monitor might be worth considering. I've got a couple of combined Smoke/CO monitors (from Bunnings). Even had one go off in the aft cabin when I had an exhaust leak. I then purchased some Colman units that are permanently wired in. Had one of these go off when one of my AGM batteries popped. CO is scary stuff when you have crew sleeping inside your boat when motoring. If you ever get a chance to, read this book, I would recommend it. Apparently the insurance company puts out a monthly newsletter to all its policy holders telling them about all the claims they've had so that the other policy holders can learn from the events. This book is a collection of the most noteable. One is the story of the guy on watch going down to wake the crew for shift change and they were all dead.
Here is the wrap about the book. - BoatU.S. provides marine insurance coverage to 250,000 American powerboaters and sailors, which makes its collection of claims reports one of the world’s largest archives of boating accidents. For more than 20 years, as writer and editor of BoatU.S.’s quarterly publication Seaworthy, Bob Adriance has sifted and analyzed this rich trove to discover and highlight the profound lessons it contains. Here is the ultimate boater’s guide to preventing, responding to, and surviving accidents under power or sail, including hurricane damage, lightning strikes, collisions, fires, groundings, sinkings, crew overboard, dismastings, and more.
Experience may be the best teacher, but the lessons are a lot less painful when the experience is someone else’s. Here is a unique opportunity to use other skippers’ misfortunes to make your own boat and seamanship safer. “A boaters’ guide as important and practical as any I’ve read. And if you can ignore the occasional frisson of guilty pleasure, one that’s as engrossing to read as The Perfect Storm.”–Tony Gibbs, yachting writer, editor, and novelist “Hair-raising disasters, hard facts, and helpful advice; Seaworthy is a compendium of no-nonsense information on avoiding problems that only a marine insurer could provide. Invaluable for the boater, builder, designer, and surveyor.”–Dave Gerr, director, Westlawn Institute of Tecnology; author of The Nature of Boats and The Elements of Boat Strengt
So what you're saying is that there is a boat going cheap in Hobart? Silver lining, I guess.
A not so grand debut for your first post.
So I suppose all of you who don't have CO monitors on your boats have decided this situation would never happen to you. (more black humour)
Only $43 from Bunnings to keep our name off the "Darwin Awards" list this year. How would you feel if it was someone you invited onto your boat was the one who paid the ultimate price. Someone like your grand children.
I have no problem with humour in these situation as some people use it to help get over the grief. I actually though it was part of the Australian culture, maybe I'm wrong. I would love to see more people posting that they were fitting CO monitors in their boats, than the recent comments on a forum poster, as I think this is the real issue. Sounds a bit like the Lamp Chop add. But every body is allowed to post what they want I suppose.
What's that song, "keep 'em laughin as you go. Just remember that the last laugh is on you"
I'll just slip on my "Bisalloy Coat" now.
So I suppose all of you who don't have CO monitors on your boats have decided this situation would never happen to you. (more black humour)
Only $43 from Bunnings to keep our name off the "Darwin Awards" list this year. How would you feel if it was someone you invited onto your boat was the one who paid the ultimate price. Someone like your grand children.
One of the first things I installed on my new boat!!