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On Tue, 22 Jul 2003 01:26:30 GMT, "Charles" wrote:
Gang, I want to relay an "occurrence" that happened at my local lake this past weekend. You are NOT getting this story third hand. I was THERE, I SAW it. This isn't one of those, "I know someone who saw...." Anyway, I stopped by a friend's house up at the lake this past Sunday. They had a big crowd all hanging around and we were standing on the dock talking. There was a fairly large pontoon boat tied along the front or lake-side edge of the dock. This wasn't on the main lake, but the cove wasn't no-wake. It's a pretty big cove. Anyway, I was marginally aware of someone out in the middle towing a tuber but not really watching them closely. I heard him come by and it seemed fairly close when he passed. Then all of the women on the dock started screaming "Too close" and I saw the kid in the tube, headed right for the front of the pontoon boat. The driver had misjudged or didn't know about the tube "sweeping" wide on the turn. My eyes are dead on the kid and he sees the pontoon boat coming. He ducks down tight inside the tube. I didn't see it but apparently the driver saw what was happening a second or so before and finally backed off. Way too much momentum to really matter at this point. Well, the tube goes right down the "tunnel" between the pontoons. The boat is heavier in the back (of course) so the gap between the bottom of the decking and the water gets narrower as you go. The tube, kid inside, wedges itself between the deck and the water about 2/3 the length of the boat. The women are screaming, the rest of the kids are crying, everyone who could swim jumps in and drags the tube back out from under the pontoon boat. Not a scratch on him. He wasn't even crying or really all that upset. I know what a lot of you are thinking here. The first thought is almost for sure just anger and calling this guy names. Second thought is, what could "I" have done, besides not pulling a tube anywhere near another boat or dock. Let's take a look at the math here. I worked this up at lunch today: Let's assume the guy was pulling the tube at 20 mph. Not an unreasonable speed for a tube and I've been wakeboarding for years at 19.5. I feel like I'm a pretty good judge of 20mph. Anyway, 20 mph is 1760 feet/min which turns into about 29 feet per second. Let's also assume that the driver saw what was happening the minute he crossed the bow of the pontoon and has a zero reaction time to slam into reverse or something. With a 60 foot rope, he has two seconds before the tube hits the pontoon boat. At 15 mph he has just a little less than three seconds. "Time is the fire in which we burn." I ripped that off from a Star Trek movie. With between two or three seconds at most, that kid is hitting the boat. The math is right there. Anyway, I am not here to pass judgment or call him names. I'm not going to get into what "could have happened." I'm telling this story because I want all of you to always keep in mind what's going on out there. It's all great fun and everything is a blast until something goes wrong. Please don't let an inexperienced driver pull a tube or a skier. If that means you, well maybe the shoe fits. Be careful out there gang. It's easy to get complacent. Believe me, you don't want to see something like this happen in front of you. It was really horrible. Charles Charles, thanks for the reminder. Like you, I have my own thoughts about the operator, but your base message is more important. Every boater who leaves the dock needs to pay attention, and put safety first. Especially inexperienced operators. Thanks again. noah Courtesy of Lee Yeaton, See the boats of rec.boats www.TheBayGuide.com/rec.boats |