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Staging Safety Equipment for Offshore Cruising: Being Ready When Seconds Count

As bluewater cruisers, we venture far from the safety nets of coastal waters, where self-reliance isn’t just a mindset – it’s our reality. In the vast expanse of the ocean, emergencies can escalate rapidly, from a man overboard to a sudden fire or a need to send a distress signal in the dead of night. That’s where “staging” your safety equipment comes into play. Staging isn’t merely storing gear. It’s about strategically positioning, enhancing, and preparing items for immediate, effective deployment. By adding simple modifications like reflective tape, lights, whistles, and lanyards, you transform standard equipment into lifesaving tools optimized for the real-world chaos of extreme events.

In this article, I will discuss some common safety gear – flares, electronic flares (eFlares), Lifesling-style rescue collars, heaving lines in throw bags, fire extinguishers and man overboard poles – focusing on practical staging ideas and techniques. These insights draw from our and other seasoned cruisers’ experiences and align with standards like those from the ISAF offshore sailing regulations, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), and other authoritative sources such as US Sailing’s Safety at Sea program and The Sailing Foundation (developers of the original Lifesling® system), ensuring your setup is effective, compliant and quick to use.

The Fundamentals of Staging: Accessibility, Visibility, Security, and Maintenance

Before diving into specifics, remember the core principles of staging:

  1. Accessibility: Gear must be identifiable and reachable in seconds, even in rough seas or low light. Mount or store items near high-access areas like the cockpit, companionway, galley, or navigation station. Gear should be secured such that it will not move from its allotted spot in rough seas or get bumped out of place.
  2. Visibility: Use labels, glow-in-the-dark markings, or SOLAS tape (high-intensity reflective material that shines under searchlights) to make equipment stand out. Where appropriate, add water- or manually-activated lights.
  3. Security: Attach lanyards or clips to your items, to prevent loss of gear overboard. That nice new eFlare will not be much use if it rolls off the deck and floats away.
  4. Maintenance: Regularly inspect for expiration dates (e.g., flares, batteries in battery powered equipment) and reduced functionality. Set reminders in your phone’s calendar app for expiry dates. Check equipment for wear and tear, and aging from sun/UV exposure.

Avant’s companionway, with a heaving line, white collision avoidance flare, small fire extinguisher, and flashlight, all instantly visible and available.

The international standard for EPIRBs is a useful example. All EPIRBs have an integrated light, an integrated lanyard, a secure wall-mountable storage system or automatic water activated storage, easy to check expiry dates, and are marked with SOLAS tape.

Staging starts with an inventory audit: list your gear, note storage locations, and create a quick-reference chart to post in the saloon or at the navigation station. In an emergency, it is easy for you or your crew to forget exactly where that gizmo is.

Item by Item

Now, let’s break it down by item.

Flares and eFlares: Signalling for Help

Pyrotechnic flares and their modern electronic counterparts (eFlares) are your lifeline for attracting rescuers. Traditional flares expire after a few years, while eFlares offer reusable, battery-powered LED distress signals that are compliant with most national regulations (if you keep the batteries fresh). We carry both aboard Avant.

Staging Tips

Enhancements

The lead photo shows Avant’s two eFlares, one US coast guard approved (longer useful life), and one that is both US Coast Guard and Canadian Coast Guard approved (shorter useful life, but brighter and IR visible). Each is in a custom built mount with a shock cord ‘seatbelt’, and lanyard and whistle attached.

Lifeslings: Man Overboard Recovery

The most common rescue collar is the patented Lifesling®, developed by The Sailing Foundation and widely endorsed by US Sailing’s Safety at Sea program. This, and the many different copies of the design (which sell under other names) remain one of the most effective and compact tools for man-overboard (MOB) recovery in offshore conditions. It provides flotation via a horseshoe-shaped buoyant sling, connected to the boat by ~150 feet of floating polypropylene line, allowing a single crew member to rescue a victim by bringing them alongside and potentially hoisting them aboard.

Staging Tips

Lifesling Preparation and Setup Best Practices

(drawn from The Sailing Foundation’s Owner’s Preparation Guide and US Sailing Safety at Sea resources)

Custom Enhancements:

Equipment map: have an easy to access reference of where to find emergency equipment.

Man Overboard Poles (Dan Buoys or MOB Markers): Marking the Position

A man overboard pole – often called a Dan buoy – is a tall, buoyant marker (typically 5-9 feet high) with a flag (code flag “O”), sometimes a light, and sometimes a drogue, designed to create a highly visible reference point in the water. It dramatically improves the chances of finding a person in waves, especially when the initial sighting is lost. Traditional rigid poles (e.g., Forespar, Scotty) are ballasted and flag-topped, while inflatable versions (e.g., SOS Dan Buoy or Switlik MOM 9) deploy via a pull cord or water activation for more compact storage. ISAF and US Sailing’s Safety Equipment Requirements often mandate a MOB pole or equivalent (including self-inflating devices) for offshore categories, emphasizing immediate deployment to “litter the water” with visible aids to mark the location of a MOB.

Staging Tips

Preparation and Setup Best Practices

(gathered from US Sailing, ISAF Special Regulations, and cruiser experiences)

Custom Enhancements:

Light and Drogue Integration

A HemiLight water activated light and whistle attached to a heaving line’s case.

Heaving Lines in Throw Bags: Precision Rescue Throws

Heaving lines – lightweight ropes in compact throw bags – are essential for pulling someone alongside without entering the water yourself. They are compact but extremely useful when staged correctly. Unlike a Lifesling, they can be tossed some distance.

Staging Tips

 Enhancements

Fire Extinguishers: Containing Onboard Blazes

Fires at sea are terrifying, often starting in the galley or engine space. Dry chemical extinguishers (ABC-rated for multiple fire types) are standard, but staging amplifies their effectiveness.

Staging Tips

 Enhancements

Avant’s galley showing the prominent fire extinguisher and fire blanket.

Final Thoughts: A Culture of Preparedness

Staging safety equipment is not a one-time task – it is an ongoing commitment that could mean the difference between a narrow escape and catastrophe. By using thoughtful storage and mounting locations, incorporating SOLAS tape and lights for visibility, whistles for signalling, and lanyards for security – plus targeted prep like regular inspections and enhancements from trusted sources – you elevate your gear from passive storage to active defence. As cruisers know, bluewater rewards the prepared (or at least does not punish them as badly). Review your setup before every passage, involve your crew in drills, and share your innovations. Fair winds and may you never need to use what you have staged. But if you do, it will be ready.