Dad fell off last time out. He is about 250 lbs, and 60 years old, and had a pretty thick wetsuit on adding another 10 lbs. I told him a few trips back he needs to jump off in fairly shallow water and learn to get back on. "I don't plan on falling off."
OK...
Well, next trip out, he falls off. He is about 200 yards off shore in waist high waves making it even harder to get on. He hops a wave and lands a little sideways, and holds on a bit, then into the water he goes.
He is struggling for about 20 minutes, getting halfway on and rolling back off, while I watch from shore and run about 1000 yards down the beach then proceed to swim out to where he is. He has a short temper, so I am thinking he is close to the point of shredding the seat with his fingernails, biting off the handlebars, or something like that.
So I get there, and to add insult to injury, I say, "did you plan to fall off?"
And of course, "I told you so!"
So I grab the nose, push myself underwater til I touch ground, and hold the ski steady as he climbs up. Then he starts it up and takes off leaving me a couple hundred yards off shore, breathing hard from the run and the swim, and kinda wishing we had a ski that could hold two people...
Anyway, we are thinking of putting on an extra rope of some sort by clipping it to the rings on each side of the handle bars, that would be closer to the front than the strap on the seat, but not as far a reach as the bars. Sort of a second grasp before having to reach up to the bars, which tends to be the point where he falls off.
Anyone have any other suggestions for making re-boarding a small craft simpler?
OK...
Well, next trip out, he falls off. He is about 200 yards off shore in waist high waves making it even harder to get on. He hops a wave and lands a little sideways, and holds on a bit, then into the water he goes.
He is struggling for about 20 minutes, getting halfway on and rolling back off, while I watch from shore and run about 1000 yards down the beach then proceed to swim out to where he is. He has a short temper, so I am thinking he is close to the point of shredding the seat with his fingernails, biting off the handlebars, or something like that.
So I get there, and to add insult to injury, I say, "did you plan to fall off?"

And of course, "I told you so!"
So I grab the nose, push myself underwater til I touch ground, and hold the ski steady as he climbs up. Then he starts it up and takes off leaving me a couple hundred yards off shore, breathing hard from the run and the swim, and kinda wishing we had a ski that could hold two people...
Anyway, we are thinking of putting on an extra rope of some sort by clipping it to the rings on each side of the handle bars, that would be closer to the front than the strap on the seat, but not as far a reach as the bars. Sort of a second grasp before having to reach up to the bars, which tends to be the point where he falls off.
Anyone have any other suggestions for making re-boarding a small craft simpler?