Hi Randy. Good to see you on this thread. Experienced 'yakkers' are much needed. 'Yes' is the answer to your Injustice Anywhere question. A thread opened up there just recently.
Hi
Anglolawyer,
can ya post a link to the IA thread?
Thanks,
Anglolawyer said:
In recent days we have learned that she told the cops the plug was removed months before. We also now know the pathologist vastly exceeded her brief by pronouncing that the death was the result of murder by removal of plug, which is actually funny, or it would be.
I thought I recall reading just today that Angelika told the cops she removed the plug in April,
now I'll have to double check my saved links again.
I wonder when she unscrewed the locking screw on his paddle?
Anglolawyer said:
In our case, there is no shark hunting (erm, are you sure that's wise?) just river kayaking on the Hudson in the wrong type of boat, in suddenly and unexpected bad weather, with no buoyancy aid, dry suit or wet suit and having drunk a little bit (not that much so maybe irrelevant). The badly holed kayak which had become totally unseaworthy by virtue of its missing plug miraculously failed to sink and instead bobbed its way to shore like a riderless horse in a race over the jumps.
Have you an initial opinion?
Hiya once again Anglolawyer,
I've been yaking here in Southern California for over 5 years now,
got into it because I was curious of an old '89 story about how a guy and girl, who went out kayaking just up the road from where I'm at the beach right now, disappeared and then over 2 days later, she was found, by chance, dead, floating face down barely visible under the waters surface as the day was ending on a Saturday in January. 28 miles away up the coast from where they left for a quick 1+1/2 mile trip up to Paradise Cove and then back.
She was killed by a Great White Shark.
I've done extensive research into this,
and because of this old shark attack, got in looking for sharks and kayaking for pleasure,
so I've spent hundreds of, if not over a thousand of hours paddling yaks or watching for sharks near shore since then.
I'm starting to learn
how to edit some of my videos,
here's a clip of a bitchin' shark
drive by
and also of a 10 foot shark breaching about 50 feet away from me,
which happened at the beach where I am at right now.
Watch this on a computer if ya get a chance,
I'm in my 10 foot yak as I videoed these near shore sharks:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxtaKmSgu7k
Anyways,
my kayaking experience has me wondering how Vinnie
could have fallen in the water if he was experienced, and not very drunk.
And she did not fall in....
The winds and waves were not too high, most likely, in their experience,
or they could have easily aborted the trip and called the Cornwall Yacht Club for help,
it seems people knew of them there.
If they were scared,
they would have been verrry cautious when coming back.
No horsing around.
Was it an accident?
Vinnie just fell in, could not get the kayak overturned +/or unswamped,
Angelika just sat there watching as he surely cussed and tried to save himself?
Or is there a way that Angelika initiated the whole incident.
It's premeditated, ya might say.
How could Angelika have surely gotten Vinnie tossed in the water?
Without his lifejacket on?
Easy.
Take out the drainage plug, help his yak take on abitta water.
The wind chop or any swells splashing around
would be also getting into the seating area, the cockpit,
which should have had a cover on it, called a skirt,
does not appear to have been used by either of these 2.
They were both using
sit-inside kayaks, where your legs go inside the yak.
He might go in the water at some point. Maybe.
It's not a sure way of getting him into the cold 46° water and trouble.
Better yet,
unscrew 1 of his locking screws on his paddles also.
If he looses a paddle, it is very difficult, if not impossible to paddle a yak without a paddle,
or even 1/2 of 1, in any windy conditions.
Here's what I can see happenin':
They paddle out into the water.
Pull up abreast, near him under a ruse,
Baby, come here, I need a Kiss!
He being
the dude, a coupla cold Modelo beers in him,
woulda paddled over quick, alongside her, I'd bet.
Take his paddle, use it to brace them both by placing it on each others lap.
Lean in, get the Kiss.
2, 3, or more, yea!
(The other day I got a fun smootch from a gal pal who kinda likes me
as I was surfing, well, ah waiting out in the line-up for my next ride.
Hey Randy, come here, I need a kiss, hahaha...)
Pulling apart,
and she pushes him over.
Remember she's an experienced yaker.
She did not fall into the water when he did, she has good balance.
As do I, especially when I look for sharks.
As do my friends when miles offshore, we stop, converse and have lunch together,
bracing or sometimes tying up our yaks back to front...
Fall in the water? Rare.
I wonder how often either Vinnie or Angelika had fallen in the waters on previous outings?
When he fell, he mighta grabbed at or for his kayak paddle,
it's a very normal thing to grab for, you hold it in you hands for sooo many hours when paddling.
Vinnie's paddle,
it coulda easily came apart, it's not locked on 1 side,
unless it is old and crusted, like mine, always in salt water...
Odd that she took his paddle from him.
You can not paddle a kayak without a paddle.
But it can help you out there to have it in your grasp...
I wonder if she had to put it back together out in the water
as he tried to figure out what was goin' on out there,
and no body was watching...
Or was there?
It also seems that it took her,
IIRC, some 20 minutes to make the 911 call for help.
"Hold on Baby".
Hmmmm...
My opinion only,
RW