Not exactly true, yes if the debris is bad enough and the current is strong enough, there isn’t a lot that will help. BUT if you have a life jacket, even in swiftly moving water, you can lean back and orient your feet downstream and it’ll keep your head away from the worst of it.
That would be significantly harder to do without a PFD.
Good point. I guess people ought not only to have life jackets, but also trained on how best to use them in rough water. Although they’re mostly kept near boats and things. Would having them hung on the cabin walls at Camp Mystic have saved lives? Not all, with whole buildings crashing around in the water, but maybe a few.
Not exactly true, yes if the debris is bad enough and the current is strong enough, there isn’t a lot that will help. BUT if you have a life jacket, even in swiftly moving water, you can lean back and orient your feet downstream and it’ll keep your head away from the worst of it.
That would be significantly harder to do without a PFD.
Good point. I guess people ought not only to have life jackets, but also trained on how best to use them in rough water. Although they’re mostly kept near boats and things. Would having them hung on the cabin walls at Camp Mystic have saved lives? Not all, with whole buildings crashing around in the water, but maybe a few.