After a few years of surf-skiing and occasionally reading of bad things happening, mostly on this site, I realized that getting separated from your ski in the ocean in big conditions was likely a prelude to death: quite frankly, no one is going to find you; all should come to grips with that. No hyperbole intended here, it was just that I noticed that every surf ski death I was aware of had some separation element associated with (or indeed was probably the cause of) the paddler’s death. I realized I needed to change my safety gear setup.
Anyway, what works for me:
I decided to go for the “body leash” concept. I stitch a stainless D-ring or triangle to each of my PFDs on the bottom front using high strength webbing and high strength 100% polyester sailmakers thread (I own a heavy duty sail-makers sewing machine, you probably could not use a regular sewing machine to do this).
I then use a (amazingly small) forged (a forged snap shackle will deform long before breaking) quick release shackle (Safe Working Load of 350 lbs, break strength of 880 lbs) attached to quality ¼” polyester (not nylon) shock cord (breaking strength of 225 lbs).
I then have a stainless carabiner (breaking strength of 220 lbs.) to connect it to the ski, usually at the center seat/well attachment point.
The shock cord is run through the fitting on both the snap shackle and carabiner, folded over, and crimped with three stainless hog rings, then taped with silicone and electrical tapes.
I have a background in engineering and set out to design it for at least a 200 lb. static load. While dynamic loads from dumping waves can easily exceed that, it is my contention that in those circumstances you would want the leash to break because getting hit by or tangled up with a ski in those conditions would be worse than getting separated. PLUS, on most skis, you would be hard pressed to find an attachment point that would hold up to anything greater than a 200 lb static load, and even that is being generous as it would likely rip out of the composite anyway (note to ski manufacturers, if you don’t already have a leash hardpoint designed into your skis, do it. Of my 5 skis (Think, Stellar, Epic, Fenn), I believe my Stellar SES has the “beefiest” leash attachment point).
The hardware I used is small and unobtrusive. One you learn the correct simple technique to remounting with it, tangling is not an issue (I also use it together with a separate, lighter duty, paddle leash).
So, I have been using this set up for about 6 years. I have had several times when I fell off the ski in reef areas (where the waves rear up) and the wave pushed the ski broadside away from me, a couple times with ~ 8-10 foot (2.5-3 m) waves on days where I was regularly hitting 13 -15 mph (21 - 25 kph) max speeds. The leash has never failed (I regularly replace the shock cord after ~ 200-250 hours of paddling, and/or after a particularly strong “pull event” (like I have described above). I of course disconnect in the shore break; the general consensus (and I agree with) is that it is dangerous to be attached to your ski in the shore break.
The link here shows some pictures (the black shrouds are neoprene and pull over the shackle and carabiner to prevent any scratching damage to the ski.)
drive.google.com/open?id=1ssVemt1UJFTg6hNlTgws0UnOJ1AaQSFq
And a thanks to Rob and all who contribute to these forums: I have learned so much from surfski.info over the years, especially about safety, particularly from reading and carefully dissecting the experiences of others.
The disclaimer: I designed this for myself, for my own use, consistent with the risks I am willing to take, my capabilities, and the conditions in which I use it. If you decide to copy it and use it, you could be seriously injured or killed.
Bill L