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#1
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Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I
had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. Got 'em on board my boat, then called the local PD to come get the swamped boat. PD says to stay with the boat, they'll be right out. I started looking at the swamped boat and figured out what happened - the drain plug fell out. They installed it from the outside in, not from the inside out which was confirmed by the boats operator - it wasn't his boat, he ran out of gas, the boat starting filling up - etc. So, I grabbed one of my spare rubber plugs from the battery storage compartment, plugged it in, took out the portable bilge pump I have for just this kind of situation and started pumping the boat out. By the time the PD got there (along with the FD with their brand new hovercraft "rescue" boat - anything to try out the new toy), the bilge pump gave it's last slurp - I handed the boat over to the PD and took the passengers back to the ramp. Post Incident: From what I gathered, this was just a fun ride for the morning. The operator had never run a boat and according to one of the shore fishermen, had a hard time starting the boat and generally looked like a newbie even launching. He was thinking of buying the boat from his friend. Oh well. The rest of the day, you really don't want to know - it's been very interesting starting with my neighbor's wife damn near slicing her hand off with a hedge clipper to baby sitting four, five and six year old kids which will NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN!!! Never knew they had that much energy - damn good thing I have a Border Collie that can herd on command - she kept them rounded up and relatively in one place. :) PS: The kids made a game out of trying to out smart Skye. Skye won everytime. :) |
#2
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On Jun 12, 3:51 pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. Got 'em on board my boat, then called the local PD to come get the swamped boat. PD says to stay with the boat, they'll be right out. I started looking at the swamped boat and figured out what happened - the drain plug fell out. They installed it from the outside in, not from the inside out which was confirmed by the boats operator - it wasn't his boat, he ran out of gas, the boat starting filling up - etc. So, I grabbed one of my spare rubber plugs from the battery storage compartment, plugged it in, took out the portable bilge pump I have for just this kind of situation and started pumping the boat out. By the time the PD got there (along with the FD with their brand new hovercraft "rescue" boat - anything to try out the new toy), the bilge pump gave it's last slurp - I handed the boat over to the PD and took the passengers back to the ramp. Post Incident: From what I gathered, this was just a fun ride for the morning. The operator had never run a boat and according to one of the shore fishermen, had a hard time starting the boat and generally looked like a newbie even launching. He was thinking of buying the boat from his friend. Oh well. The rest of the day, you really don't want to know - it's been very interesting starting with my neighbor's wife damn near slicing her hand off with a hedge clipper to baby sitting four, five and six year old kids which will NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN!!! Never knew they had that much energy - damn good thing I have a Border Collie that can herd on command - she kept them rounded up and relatively in one place. :) PS: The kids made a game out of trying to out smart Skye. Skye won everytime. :) Nice going Tom! I am sure the Man upstairs remembers good deeds like that. |
#3
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. Got 'em on board my boat, then called the local PD to come get the swamped boat. PD says to stay with the boat, they'll be right out. I started looking at the swamped boat and figured out what happened - the drain plug fell out. They installed it from the outside in, not from the inside out which was confirmed by the boats operator - it wasn't his boat, he ran out of gas, the boat starting filling up - etc. So, I grabbed one of my spare rubber plugs from the battery storage compartment, plugged it in, took out the portable bilge pump I have for just this kind of situation and started pumping the boat out. By the time the PD got there (along with the FD with their brand new hovercraft "rescue" boat - anything to try out the new toy), the bilge pump gave it's last slurp - I handed the boat over to the PD and took the passengers back to the ramp. Post Incident: From what I gathered, this was just a fun ride for the morning. The operator had never run a boat and according to one of the shore fishermen, had a hard time starting the boat and generally looked like a newbie even launching. He was thinking of buying the boat from his friend. Yet more evidence for the need to require a solid boating education course for new boaters, and a licensing requirement for all boaters, including a "junior" license for younger boaters. |
#4
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JimH wrote:
On Jun 12, 3:51 pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. Got 'em on board my boat, then called the local PD to come get the swamped boat. PD says to stay with the boat, they'll be right out. I started looking at the swamped boat and figured out what happened - the drain plug fell out. They installed it from the outside in, not from the inside out which was confirmed by the boats operator - it wasn't his boat, he ran out of gas, the boat starting filling up - etc. So, I grabbed one of my spare rubber plugs from the battery storage compartment, plugged it in, took out the portable bilge pump I have for just this kind of situation and started pumping the boat out. By the time the PD got there (along with the FD with their brand new hovercraft "rescue" boat - anything to try out the new toy), the bilge pump gave it's last slurp - I handed the boat over to the PD and took the passengers back to the ramp. Post Incident: From what I gathered, this was just a fun ride for the morning. The operator had never run a boat and according to one of the shore fishermen, had a hard time starting the boat and generally looked like a newbie even launching. He was thinking of buying the boat from his friend. Oh well. The rest of the day, you really don't want to know - it's been very interesting starting with my neighbor's wife damn near slicing her hand off with a hedge clipper to baby sitting four, five and six year old kids which will NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN!!! Never knew they had that much energy - damn good thing I have a Border Collie that can herd on command - she kept them rounded up and relatively in one place. :) PS: The kids made a game out of trying to out smart Skye. Skye won everytime. :) Nice going Tom! I am sure the Man upstairs remembers good deeds like that. SW Tom is working off a big list of demerits, but he's obviously a good guy...on Thursdays. :) |
#5
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On Jun 12, 4:04 pm, HK wrote:
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. Got 'em on board my boat, then called the local PD to come get the swamped boat. PD says to stay with the boat, they'll be right out. I started looking at the swamped boat and figured out what happened - the drain plug fell out. They installed it from the outside in, not from the inside out which was confirmed by the boats operator - it wasn't his boat, he ran out of gas, the boat starting filling up - etc. So, I grabbed one of my spare rubber plugs from the battery storage compartment, plugged it in, took out the portable bilge pump I have for just this kind of situation and started pumping the boat out. By the time the PD got there (along with the FD with their brand new hovercraft "rescue" boat - anything to try out the new toy), the bilge pump gave it's last slurp - I handed the boat over to the PD and took the passengers back to the ramp. Post Incident: From what I gathered, this was just a fun ride for the morning. The operator had never run a boat and according to one of the shore fishermen, had a hard time starting the boat and generally looked like a newbie even launching. He was thinking of buying the boat from his friend. Yet more evidence for the need to require a solid boating education course for new boaters, and a licensing requirement for all boaters, including a "junior" license for younger boaters 5 people on a 14 footer.......1 life jacket..........drain plug installed from inside the boat. I don't think licensing would have helped in this situation. |
#6
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. snip.... What do ya know!! It was my turn to be helpful in a bit of a tricky situation this afternoon at moms' nursinghome. As I was pushing he wheelchair back up grade on the driveway (after a visit to the fishpond and gazebo), I noticed a white taxi coming up over my right shoulder. I kept glancing at it as we were sharing the same roadway and I was being cautious..then he stopped suddenly. I looked up and saw an elderly resident come hell bent crossing in front of him. For a fraction of a second I thought she was driving a motor driven wheelchair...as no one was pushing. I thought she was speeding up to beat the cab until I saw the horror on her face. I let mom go and ran to catch her just as she hit the soft mulch on the center turnaround island. Worked out great, she wasn't too shook up, the staff lady who came running down was thankful...told me it was another resident who had opened the code locked front door to let the lady out....and for good reason she wasn't supposed to let past those doors. Oh yeah mom... as I abandoned her, she started to roll backwards but had the presence of mind to apply her wheelchair brakes. |
#7
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. snip.. The rest of the day, you really don't want to know - it's been very interesting starting with my neighbor's wife damn near slicing her hand off with a hedge clipper to baby sitting four, five and six year old kids which will NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN!!! Never knew they had that much energy - damn good thing I have a Border Collie that can herd on command - she kept them rounded up and relatively in one place. :) PS: The kids made a game out of trying to out smart Skye. Skye won everytime. :) As for this...next time send the rugrats to JohnH for babysitting. I |
#8
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On Jun 12, 4:32 pm, "Don White" wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in messagenews:nmt2549vf9jubbjr9siqsb5poblkieo84t@4ax .com... Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. snip.... What do ya know!! It was my turn to be helpful in a bit of a tricky situation this afternoon at moms' nursinghome. As I was pushing he wheelchair back up grade on the driveway (after a visit to the fishpond and gazebo), I noticed a white taxi coming up over my right shoulder. I kept glancing at it as we were sharing the same roadway and I was being cautious..then he stopped suddenly. I looked up and saw an elderly resident come hell bent crossing in front of him. For a fraction of a second I thought she was driving a motor driven wheelchair...as no one was pushing. I thought she was speeding up to beat the cab until I saw the horror on her face. I let mom go and ran to catch her just as she hit the soft mulch on the center turnaround island. Worked out great, she wasn't too shook up, the staff lady who came running down was thankful...told me it was another resident who had opened the code locked front door to let the lady out....and for good reason she wasn't supposed to let past those doors. Oh yeah mom... as I abandoned her, she started to roll backwards but had the presence of mind to apply her wheelchair brakes. Nice going Don. I cannot compare to you guys regarding a good deed for the day.......mine was moving from the kitchen to the outside deck to fart this morning while my wife was eating breakfast. ;-) |
#9
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On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 13:48:16 -0700 (PDT), JimH
wrote: On Jun 12, 4:32 pm, "Don White" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in messagenews:nmt2549vf9jubbjr9siqsb5poblkieo84t@4ax .com... Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. snip.... What do ya know!! It was my turn to be helpful in a bit of a tricky situation this afternoon at moms' nursinghome. As I was pushing he wheelchair back up grade on the driveway (after a visit to the fishpond and gazebo), I noticed a white taxi coming up over my right shoulder. I kept glancing at it as we were sharing the same roadway and I was being cautious..then he stopped suddenly. I looked up and saw an elderly resident come hell bent crossing in front of him. For a fraction of a second I thought she was driving a motor driven wheelchair...as no one was pushing. I thought she was speeding up to beat the cab until I saw the horror on her face. I let mom go and ran to catch her just as she hit the soft mulch on the center turnaround island. Worked out great, she wasn't too shook up, the staff lady who came running down was thankful...told me it was another resident who had opened the code locked front door to let the lady out....and for good reason she wasn't supposed to let past those doors. Oh yeah mom... as I abandoned her, she started to roll backwards but had the presence of mind to apply her wheelchair brakes. Nice going Don. I cannot compare to you guys regarding a good deed for the day.......mine was moving from the kitchen to the outside deck to fart this morning while my wife was eating breakfast. ;-) I didn't even do that. Didn't have to fart. When the time comes that I'm in the position to do such a deed I hope I have "right stuff" like you do - and that it's not raining outside. You princes here humble me. That's why I keep coming back. Distressed boaters. Runaway wheelchairs. Emergency evacuations. Pretty exciting stuff. All I did today was mow the lawn and do some weed-whacking. --Vic |
#10
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On Jun 12, 6:17 pm, Vic Smith wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 13:48:16 -0700 (PDT), JimH wrote: On Jun 12, 4:32 pm, "Don White" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in messagenews:nmt2549vf9jubbjr9siqsb5poblkieo84t@4ax .com... Got to the lake this morning about 7 AM - later than I wanted, but I had to help a neighbor out by watching their kids until the school bus came. Launched and started out to my favorite early morning spots when I spied a boat in trouble - as in the process of swamping. It was a 14 footer with five people on board. They were waving and hollering - why somebody on the lake didn't call, I don't know, but I went over to assist - get this - one PFD for five of them. Smart. snip.... What do ya know!! It was my turn to be helpful in a bit of a tricky situation this afternoon at moms' nursinghome. As I was pushing he wheelchair back up grade on the driveway (after a visit to the fishpond and gazebo), I noticed a white taxi coming up over my right shoulder. I kept glancing at it as we were sharing the same roadway and I was being cautious..then he stopped suddenly. I looked up and saw an elderly resident come hell bent crossing in front of him. For a fraction of a second I thought she was driving a motor driven wheelchair...as no one was pushing. I thought she was speeding up to beat the cab until I saw the horror on her face. I let mom go and ran to catch her just as she hit the soft mulch on the center turnaround island. Worked out great, she wasn't too shook up, the staff lady who came running down was thankful...told me it was another resident who had opened the code locked front door to let the lady out....and for good reason she wasn't supposed to let past those doors. Oh yeah mom... as I abandoned her, she started to roll backwards but had the presence of mind to apply her wheelchair brakes. Nice going Don. I cannot compare to you guys regarding a good deed for the day.......mine was moving from the kitchen to the outside deck to fart this morning while my wife was eating breakfast. ;-) I didn't even do that. Didn't have to fart. When the time comes that I'm in the position to do such a deed I hope I have "right stuff" like you do - and that it's not raining outside. You princes here humble me. That's why I keep coming back. Distressed boaters. Runaway wheelchairs. Emergency evacuations. Pretty exciting stuff. All I did today was mow the lawn and do some weed-whacking. --Vic Besides the fart redirecting I did the same thing today.......cut the lawn. But that does not take away the fact that both Tom's and Don's deeds were commendable. I find no reason to put them down for posting them Vic. Hey...my wife volunteers at the Animal Protective League and today was her day for volunteering. My good deed yesterday was taking a 78 year old friend of ours out for a boat ride. BTW: I did not say so but I also did a good thing today. I visited a shop owner who has a son in the Army recently deployed to Iraq and suffering injury from a IED exploding in their base. A truck carrying explosives blew through the entrance to their base and exploded, killing on soldier, taking off the arm of another and injuring several others, including the son of this shop owner. He was expected to lose hearing due to the shattering of his ear drums from the explosion........the good news was that she got a call from him this morning and heard that he will be ok with the ears. Those injured from the attack are being flown to Germany for hospitalization and surgery. Her son will remain on base while he heals. When I heard about the incident my heart went out to her and wanted to make sure she was doing OK. The bottom line is that good deeds are indeed...........*Good* deeds. Try doing some.............. |
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