Jet boaters bring 'wild west' to the water
Upper Pitt River has been the site of four sinkings, Saturday's the most recent
Larry Pynn
Vancouver Sun
Thursday, July 03, 2008
The sinking of a fourth jet boat on the upper Pitt River this year is raising concerns about safety in the remote Lower Mainland wilderness watershed best known for its quality fishing experience.
"It's been the wild, wild west up here," Pitt River Lodge owner Dan Gerak said Tuesday. "There is no policing up here, so it is getting crazy."
Jet boaters rarely wear life jackets, often drink alcohol and on occasion pull ashore to fire their guns, he said.
While "half of them are very respectful" of the river, he said, others consider the upper Pitt a "place where they can get away with whatever they want as there is no way the police can get up the river to check them for anything."
Ridge Meadows RCMP refused to provide anyone to comment on the problem Tuesday.
The upper Pitt River is a popular catch-and-release fishing stream that flows into the north end of Pitt Lake about 60 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, and is not connected by road to the rest of the Lower Mainland.
Gerak said it's fortunate that no one has died in any of the four sinkings so far this year, but fears a tragedy is just around the corner.
"It won't be long before someone gets killed," said Gerak, an award-winning conservationist whose lodge is located seven kilometres upstream from the lake.
"This river is more and more popular for jet boats and is very dangerous with all the sweepers from the erosion and the trees falling down."
Gerak said the latest sinking occurred Saturday, when a 6.5-metre Washington state boat with two persons aboard crashed into a sweeper, a tree protruding from the river bank.
The vessel "rolled over just below the lodge and two people got trapped underneath as the boat was going down the river," he said.
One person wearing a life jacket took a couple of breaths under the hull then pushed himself out. The water was so cold he did not have the energy to swim to shore and just floated into slack water, Gerak said.
The second person had no life jacket and "pushed himself out just in the nick of time because the boat got grounded on the bottom where there would have been no chance to escape."
In another incident earlier this spring, a jet boat carrying a family of four also hit a sweeper and flipped, Gerak said.
"One boy was trapped under the boat for a couple of minutes, the only one that had a life jacket on. He luckily popped out after a couple of minutes."
Gerak said his fishing guides, who float downstream on rafts, are at risk from jet boaters speeding along the river.
The federal government is loath to restrict public access to navigable waters except for safety reasons and only after extensive public consultations.
Unlike conventional boats with propellers exposed to the elements, a jet boat sucks water into an impeller unit, which expels it at high speed to push the boat along.
Jet boats must be operated at relatively high speeds to plane across the surface, and are least manoeuvrable when travelling downstream.
lpynn@png.canwest.com© The Vancouver Sun 2008