Losing my glasses

These should work
http://www.sablewateroptics.com/goggles/rs101.php

yeah
Try the “first name” in sun glass staps…they were the first…designed by Jackson Hole white water yakers and boaters…

CROAKIES!! they are tight as you want

Floats
For those of you that use the straps with floats, do they work? As heavy as my glasses are I’m not sure they would do any good.

I prefer EK EKcessories
to Croakies. At least for my glasses, the attachment to the ear-piece is more secure.

http://www.rei.com/product/709557

I recommend the yellow foam version for best visibility. I haven’t had a pair of glasses come off in several years of surfing and rolling practice since switching to these. Very easy to tighten the strap for a very secure hold when you want it.

Yes, the floats float

three choices
1) You go down with them on, and come up with them gone (don’t laugh, I’ve done it).

2) Put them in your pocket

3) Put a leash on them

These are great, do not fog, float,
and you can get your script.

http://www.seaspecs.com/

These are handy
I actually find it helpful to be able to see when setting up a roll - at least early in the learning. The goggles aren’t the best for long range clarity, but are better than nothing. Also, you can use them to swim down to the bottom and find your lost glasses!



http://www.aquagoggles.com/

more durable too?
I would assume, but have you had them knocked around a lot in surf or WW? Normally I buy very cheap glasses ($25 or so) since I figure something will happen to them, but $49 is still a good price and if more durable then worth the cost. No fog would mean I’d use them all the time in surf which is often the one place I go without sunglasses.

When it really counts, I use string.

– Last Updated: Apr-26-10 11:43 PM EST –

There's a trend in modern eyeglasses to have very skinny ear pieces. I sometimes use Croakies, which years ago worked great, but on new-style eyeglass frames they can slide free very easily.

Now, when I might be in a rough-water situation I use thin parachute cord or boot laces. Tie two half hitches and cinch it down tight just in front of the plastic ear piece so it can't possibly slip off. If you make the string exactly the right length, you can put the glasses on with the string up over your head, then pull the string down behind your head, past "the part the sticks out toward the back" so it loosens up just a little, and your glasses can't even slide down your nose much, and they can't be pulled off no matter what happens. It's important to get the length right, which is easy once you have done it once or twice, but your head may vary. Best of all, it's free (assuming you already have such material laying around the house). Oh, one more thing. Once you make the "string strap" the right length, there's no need to re-tie knots or mess with it ever again. Just loosen the "lasso" of each two-half-hitches knot to remove, and cinch them down again to attach.

Oh, regarding those float straps? Take note of what I mentioned about new-style frames and skinny ear pieces. When paddling with Chuck_IL a few years ago, I passed a pair of sunglasses floating in the river by the float strap. I asked Chuck if he was missing his sunglasses, which he was, so I said "wait right there and they will float to you". Sure enough, they were his - they had fallen off his deck when he set them down and forgot them. He grabbed the strap as they floated by and when he lifted, the sunglasses slipped free, never to be seen again.

$25 for glasses?
Tell me where you get your prescription filled. If you are talking about non perscription sunglasses I wouldn’t even bother in the water. It’s too much of a pain wiping all the salt crystals off to make wearing glasses worth it if I could see without them.

eeek, no sunglasses?
A few hours of that would tire my eyes. Years of that will get you blind. Spots sometimes annoy me, but mostly I have no real problem.

lasik
best 2700 bucks i ever spent… and it’s cheaper now

Lost a pair using Croakies
and have sworn off them since.



Original Chums (fabric tube with surgical tubing inside) work great with larger temples, such as Ray-ban Wayfarers.



For temples with smaller ends, like the regular glasses I am now wearing, Chums makes a retainer with silicone rubber “suckers” that hold very well if the temples are cleaned of skin grease. I had these very glasses torn off in an altrication between me, a double-bladed paddle and an overhanging hemlock tree on the Shaver’s Fork. Clarion simply picked them up as they floated by.



You were planning on using a float, weren’t you?



Jim

For what it’s worth…
Not sure what you prescription is, but we have sun glasses from I think Duluth Trading company that come with an section in the lower half that comes in corrections between 1.0 and 3.0, in .5 increments. They are on the heavy side and cost more than $25, but are very replaceable and will stay on up to a point as well as be recoverable with something like a croakie and a float.



That said, short of some of the specifically designed ones like Sing mentions I am not sure what you can trust to stay on in real surf. And there are situations when even if you can see, you really can’t see. Like really dark water, capsizing near dusk or the swirly aerated water you hit in WW or surf.



I agree that being able to see helps learning to roll, but I am one who has always kept my eyes shut under water and this isn’t going to change well into my 50’s. So I mostly learned by feel of the paddle and the water, and using the boat to help with orientation. It works - when I screw up a roll it would rarely have been fixed by my being able to see anything. I’ve known a few others who roll blind, and they do fine.

Floating ones from Totes,
the umbrella people. I guess they still make them.



I have 4 I bought about 15 years ago and have been using the same one since then. Best eyeglass retainers I’ve ever seen! They have a floating foam band, are nylon coated and the earpiece holders are heavy duty enough to keep even small frames securely but work for large ones. I’ve been maytagged in the surf, big class IV+ too many times to remember, and am still using the same original strap. And sunglasses.

Wiley X sunglasses
I’ve got a pair of Wiley X sunglasses - they came with a strap that actually click/snaps into the earpieces. Very nice and seem secure - I’ve been upside down + wet exited with them in calm water w/o issue.

Always test it!
Always test it!

Need reliable vision at all times
For folks who wear glasses and are heavily dependent on them:


  1. Be aware that it’s pretty easy to pop a lens. The frames may stay on your head, but the force of a wave or overturn could pop out a lens.



    2)So if I’m on a longer trip in a remote area I always carry a second pair of glasses.



    The issue is not just practise rolls—it’s that you need to have reliable vision on the water at all times. If I lost my glasses in a remote area it would be a life-or-death situation, given my eyes.

Floating Sunglasses – Amazing
Floating Sunglasses – Never lose a pair of sunglasses to the lake again!



Go to eckyfloatables.com



Amazing