By Anna Sharratt, BrighterLife.ca
David Banerjee got a big lesson in water safety when he was seven. On his first canoe trip with his father in Muskoka, ON, the canoe capsized, tossing both of them into deep water.
“I dog-paddled towards shore, and I assumed that my father knew how to swim because he was, after all, my father, and capable of anything,” says Banerjee, a Toronto teacher. “But my father had never had the opportunity to learn to swim properly.”
Fortunately, his dad was wearing a lifejacket, albeit an old one that barely supported his weight. Through sheer luck and the help of passing boaters, the pair was rescued.
“To the best of my knowledge, my father has never set foot in a canoe since,” says Banerjee.
Accidents like that occur all the time — sometimes with dire outcomes. Each year, more than 160 Canadians drown while boating, according to the Red Cross. But, as in this case, the simple act of wearing a lifejacket can help prevent a tragedy — as can a change in attitudes, says Shannon Scully-Pratt, water safety program representative at the Red Cross in Central Ontario. To begin with, she says, adults need to apply rules they enforce with their children to themselves. That means wearing lifejackets or personal flotation devices (PFDs) when boating or using pleasure craft. Taking steps to be safe in the heat through careful food storage and not taking chances in overheated vehicles are other ways to reduce risk.
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Original Source: Stay Safe This Summer, By Anna Sharratt, BrighterLife.ca
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