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On Sep 1, 7:31 am, Wayne.B wrote:
http://www.connpost.com/localnews/ci_6693076 It's not clear what the moral of this story is other than the need for a thorough pre-purchase survey and high capacity bilge pumps. The description of 6 to 7 foot seas is highly unlikely although Stratford Point is an area with strong currents and tide rips. The opening line is ridiculous: BRIDGEPORT - Their boat sinking in stormy 7-foot seas, boating experience and preparation may have spelled the critical difference between life and death for a Moodus couple as their vessel sank Tuesday beneath the waves off Stratford Point. **** The reporter later claims that between the three people aboard they had "combined boating experience of almost 30 years". I know that some boaters accumulate 10 years' experience in 10 years- but a lot simply get six months' experience 20 times (probably the majority of 2-3 times a year boat users). I suspect, from the description of events, that they abandoned a swamped boat. Normally a bad move. Maybe even only partially swamped- note that the boat cushions (typically foam filled and buoyant) were still in place after the boat had been salvaged. Even the bow of the boat sticking up through the surface is easier to sport from the air or a rescue vessel than the top of somebody's head. I'd hate to think that with 6-8 inches of water on the floorboards these new boat owners panicked "We're sinking!" and jumped overboard. No battery box, no manual bailing option, no purchase oriented inspection (that should have, but might not have, detected a loose hose). Apparently no simple tools. Sounds like they may not have had any pfd's, either- but lashing the fenders together was an inspired substitute. 7 foot waves? Maybe, but I'd be reluctant to assign much credibility to wave height descriptions provided by panicked people who made a lot of bad decisions. Of course when you're explaining to your buddies why you abandoned a sinking boat, 7,8, or 9 foot waves sound a lot more dramatic and "excusable" than losing it in 2-3 footers. A legitimate 3 foot chop can be a significant factor for most trailer boats, real 4- footers a serious and normally uncomfortable challenge. A 7 foot wave is tall enough that people standing in the cockpit of a boat lke the one in the article won't see anything but a wall of water when they are down in the trough. I'd have to drag out the Beaufort scale, but I think you'd need hurricane foce winds to experience 7-foot chop. Any hurricanes in CT last Tuesday? |
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