![]() |
Pourable transom?
That little ad to the right of the Google groups reminds me of one day
when I ran aground and was asleep waiting for the tide to rise. My friend had been talking to a powerboater who volunteered to pull us off. I came out of the cabin just in time to see the powerboat get a running start. As I frantically waved my arms for him to stop, he hit the limit of the rope and pulled his transom off going about 25 kts. Being too stunned to fall over laughing, I acted nice and gave him a gallon of epoxy and some glass matting. We did help him recover his engine and pushed him onto the beach. |
Pourable transom?
Parallax wrote:
That little ad to the right of the Google groups reminds me of one day when I ran aground and was asleep waiting for the tide to rise. My friend had been talking to a powerboater who volunteered to pull us off. I came out of the cabin just in time to see the powerboat get a running start. As I frantically waved my arms for him to stop, he hit the limit of the rope and pulled his transom off going about 25 kts. Being too stunned to fall over laughing, I acted nice and gave him a gallon of epoxy and some glass matting. We did help him recover his engine and pushed him onto the beach. You interfered with Darwin at work! That's stupid idea about #3739.... ;-) At least you're distracting us from having to put our babies to bed for the winter...... Had a reverse equivalent: 30' or so powerboat determined that the creek's navaids weren't applicable to him, despite the obviously grounded tree pretty much in front of him on the sandbar. He plowed into it pretty hard, but it was a pretty steep-shouldered bar and It wouldn't have taken too much more than he could apply to get off. We took pity on him, unhooked from the comfy mooring, motored around to the other side of the bar, and came up to his transom offering a tow. His response was so condescending that I firewalled the throttle so that our prop wash lifted his transom a good 6". His expressions (verbal and visual) made my day as I returned to the comfy mooring on the other side of the bar. I believe he spent the rest of the night bouncing on that bar. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
Pourable transom?
Jere Lull wrote in message . ..
Parallax wrote: That little ad to the right of the Google groups reminds me of one day when I ran aground and was asleep waiting for the tide to rise. My friend had been talking to a powerboater who volunteered to pull us off. I came out of the cabin just in time to see the powerboat get a running start. As I frantically waved my arms for him to stop, he hit the limit of the rope and pulled his transom off going about 25 kts. Being too stunned to fall over laughing, I acted nice and gave him a gallon of epoxy and some glass matting. We did help him recover his engine and pushed him onto the beach. You interfered with Darwin at work! That's stupid idea about #3739.... ;-) At least you're distracting us from having to put our babies to bed for the winter...... Had a reverse equivalent: 30' or so powerboat determined that the creek's navaids weren't applicable to him, despite the obviously grounded tree pretty much in front of him on the sandbar. He plowed into it pretty hard, but it was a pretty steep-shouldered bar and It wouldn't have taken too much more than he could apply to get off. We took pity on him, unhooked from the comfy mooring, motored around to the other side of the bar, and came up to his transom offering a tow. His response was so condescending that I firewalled the throttle so that our prop wash lifted his transom a good 6". His expressions (verbal and visual) made my day as I returned to the comfy mooring on the other side of the bar. I believe he spent the rest of the night bouncing on that bar. When I was in college (believe it or not I graduated) I coded accident reports for the FL Highway patrol as a job. One accident report involving a boat was amazing. This guy backed his boat down the ramp but when he stopped suddenly, the boat wasn't properly secured and it slid off the trailer and into the water. Nobody being around, he took off his clothes and swam out to it. When he got aboard, he turned back to see his truck roll down the ramp into the water. Next, he realized he hadn't put in the drain plugs and had nothing to plug them. Next, the trooper arrived at the landing to have lunch and stated in the report "I didn't have the heart to cite him for indecent exposure". Before I got into sailing, I was staying on St Georges Is, Fl for Mem. Day anfd a friend brought his 16' runabout which he put in at the landing on the bay side. He motored around to the gulf side and we played in his boat all day. Later, I had gone into Apalach for dinner and got back very late and didnt know he had decided to just anchor the boat off the beach beyond the surf because he had too much to drink to motor back around. He happened to have one of those Danforth style anchors with the slip shank toi make it easy to retrieve. That night, serious thunderstorms. In morning, when I woke up, he had this serious dejected look on his face as his boat was gone. We walked down the beach and found it swamped about 1 mile away near the beach. We pushed it out and I swam the anchor waaaaay out beyond the surf. More storms came up and soon the surf was breaking over the boat. He called the Fl Marine Patrol and they came and towed it submerged all the way over to Apalach for free. His insurance paid. He bought it back from the insurance company, sold the engine to one guy, the hull to another and the trailer to another and came out ahead $500. He didn't buy another boat, thank god. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:21 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com