ChatterBank1 min ago
3rd Child Dies: Your Heart Goes Out To The Families.
30 Answers
http:// news.uk .msn.co ...es-i n-canoe -traged y-1
Out of six people in the canoe, three children dead, one of the fathers is missing presumed drowned. They were on Loch Gairloch, an extremely large expanse of water in relation to their canoe, and which flows into the Sea of the Hebrides, part of the North Atlantic.
Should they have been there in the first place? I only ask this because bearing in mind the ages of the three kids who have perished, i.e. 2years, and two of them 5 years, weren't the two adults taking a massive risk in the first place?
How can the two families ever hope to get over this? My heart goes out to them in these dark days.
Out of six people in the canoe, three children dead, one of the fathers is missing presumed drowned. They were on Loch Gairloch, an extremely large expanse of water in relation to their canoe, and which flows into the Sea of the Hebrides, part of the North Atlantic.
Should they have been there in the first place? I only ask this because bearing in mind the ages of the three kids who have perished, i.e. 2years, and two of them 5 years, weren't the two adults taking a massive risk in the first place?
How can the two families ever hope to get over this? My heart goes out to them in these dark days.
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That's not too helpful a suggestion, is it Chas? A passing tree-trunk would have been a buoyancy aid, as would a large helium balloon! In the current case - and at a more practical level - so would a set of arm-bands or a rubber waist-ring. I am still not sure, therefore, what the words meant here.
That's not too helpful a suggestion, is it Chas? A passing tree-trunk would have been a buoyancy aid, as would a large helium balloon! In the current case - and at a more practical level - so would a set of arm-bands or a rubber waist-ring. I am still not sure, therefore, what the words meant here.
'buoyancy aid'is a specific form of flotation device used when canoing/sailing etc.(or even leraning to swin) not just anything that floats !
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buoyancy_aid
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buoyancy_aid
Since I am not involved in swimming or canoeing, I simply gave the words their literal meaning. Thus, to me, a 'buoyancy aid' is - by definition - "anything which helps one to stay afloat". Given that you are involved in such activities and the manifest danger of the devices you refer to, I'm surprised that you felt them adequate for the safety of your grandchildren. A similar river-accident in England a month or two ago...never mind a sealoch accident in Scotland...clearly revealed the dangers of water absolutely anywhere.
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