Some solid advice here, and thanks for the reminder. Unless the water is flat calm with little or no flow, the knees are the limit for me. Saying that I have crossed fast deep water up to my waste in water, buddying up (arms locked across shoulders) with an experience angler who knew the flow very well . We almost seemed to run across the water at 45 degrees to the flow, almost dancing across the stones, because we were so deep and buoyant. With plenty of run out it did not feel dangerous at all, but that was because I was with someone who had been doing this for 20+ years at the same location.
One follow up question I have often wondered about is the belief that, if the waders fill with water, they will drag you under immediately and drown you.
But why?
I understand that if you fill your waders and stand up, i.e.
out of the water, all the water makes them incredibly heavy and difficult to walk around in. Therefore, you feel the weight would drag you down and certainly it makes standing up more difficult and presumably dragging yourself up a bank would also be difficult. However, the water inside your waders has the same buoyancy as water outside your waders and therefore with your head and shoulders above the water, apart from the weight of the wader material and possibly some added friction, I do not see how there would be any difference to your buoyancy or movement compared to being fully clothed? If you fall in with lots of clothes on, does all the water trapped between your cloths drag you down. I don't think so. Sure it is harder to swim, but that is just the weight and drag of the clothes, not the water inside them.
I wonder if this perceived risk, which may be non-existent (I am yet undecided) actually causes people to panic, which increases the risk of drowning.
Thoughts?
I know some of the following are only for neoprene waders but I presume the same principles would apply to breathable waders.
http://www.sexyloops.com/articles/killerwader.shtmlhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VXJR1hZbzXkhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2m0_naq0-qchttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3b9mUiFc0shttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKwObngww3ghttp://www.flyrodreel.com/magazine/2006/november/can-your-waders-kill-youWhile the belt would stop the wader from filling rapidly, it would have the added benefit of trapping some air and increasing your buoyancy.