
Safety is no accident
The Club’s safety policies encourage individual safety and the safety of those with whom you paddle.
Lower Columbia Canoe Club members sign a waiver indicating their understanding that at all times safety is an individual club member's responsibility. Nevertheless, the club does have some simple safety policies that are strictly followed. These policies encourage individual safety and the safety of those with whom you paddle. We ask everyone to follow them as if their life depends on them. In some circumstances, it could!
PFDs ARE REQUIRED: PFDs (Personal Floatation Devices, i.e. life jackets) are to be worn and fastened at all times while on the water.
NO ALCOHOL: No alcohol or marijuana are allowed before or during trips. After boats are out of the water and the paddling day is over, beverages can be consumed at your own risk.
WAIVERS: Paddling with the LCCC requires signing the LCCC waiver. Non-members who paddle on club-sponsored trips must sign an LCCC Guest Waiver.
MINIMUM NUMBER OF BOATS IS THREE: A minimum of three boats is required for LCCC whitewater trips. Any trip with fewer than three boats is NOT a club trip.
HELMETS: Helmets are required to be worn for all rapids Class II and higher.
TETHERS (to SUP or paddle) are not to be used on moving water or whitewater.
FLOATATION is to be installed in both ends of any hardshell boat (kayak or canoe).
In practice, trip coordinators are not responsible for enforcing safety policies. Members are expected to know and practice them. In the interest of safety, trip coordinators may (but are not required to) screen participants for appropriate paddling skills for a planned trip, inspect boats for adequate floatation and no entangling lines, and may often conduct short reminders of the universal river signals and proper swimming technique. For more on water safety, the club recommends people download and read the American Whitewater Affiliate Safety Code.
GENERAL INFO
AW Safety Code
Basic instructions for safe paddling
The International Scale of River Difficulty
Understanding what whitewater ratings mean
AW Accident Database
Where we record fatalities and near misses
Accident Reporting with Charlie Walbridge
A presentation by the guy who tracks accidents and started the AW Accident Database
LCCC Safety Series
Presentations and Discussions with LCCC club members
LCCC Blog
Individual safety-related articles are linked separately, below
FIRST AID, HEALTH AND FITNESS
SAFETY CULTURE
SCOUTING
HOLES
RESCUE
ON SWIMMING WHITEWATER (because we are all in between swims)
The Mama Bear Swim Team
Tips for whitewater swimming
HIGH WATER INCURS ADDITIONAL RISK
ROPES AND SIGNALS
SKILLS AND PREPAREDNESS
EQUIPMENT
THE HUMAN FACTOR
LEVELING UP / STEPPING UP TO HARDER WHITEWATER
Whitewater Readiness Quiz
Assess where you stand before taking greater risks
IF ANY OF THESE LINKS DON’T WORK please do let us know.