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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,985
Thanks: 2,255
Thanked 784 Times in 560 Posts
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Especially on a busy weekend, when TowBoatUS is very busy—and not always finding their hookup—this lightweight and compact device could get you home:
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Waltham Ma./Meredith NH
Posts: 4,236
Thanks: 2,293
Thanked 1,224 Times in 782 Posts
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I don't know if anyone on here happened to be at the Meredith loading ramp this summer when the guy dropped his brand new boat on the ramp. I guess he took the safety chain off before he backed into the water and the winch must have been on release. The boat rolled right off the trailer as he was backing up. I wasn't there to see it but my best friend knows the guy and he said he called him up crying and asking him for advise on how to get it back on the trailer. I heard it tied up the loading ramp for 4 hours.
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Litchfield/Gilford
Posts: 828
Thanks: 233
Thanked 224 Times in 131 Posts
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 5,075
Thanks: 215
Thanked 903 Times in 509 Posts
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Also looks like it will get you home if home is down wind.
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SIKSUKR |
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#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 312
Thanks: 439
Thanked 16 Times in 13 Posts
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Several years ago I worked at a salt water marina that handled some good size cruisers. We had a teenage "dock boy" to assist with landings and pump gas. He was helping one of our customers dock his 35 footer. The owner's two BIKINI clad daughters were handling lines. One of them LEANED over the railing to throw him a line and our boy walked right off the end of the pier!
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Tallyho For This Useful Post: | ||
Biggd (01-12-2017), rander7823 (01-12-2017) |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Cape Cod
Posts: 228
Thanks: 228
Thanked 36 Times in 20 Posts
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Last August I was in unfamiliar waters NE of Dow Island across from Long Island. Didn't check the chart carefully enough and a large solid structure jumped up off the bottom and struck the outdrive. Really, it wasn't MY fault!
![]() Some on the boat claimed we were sinking just because the engine compartment and the cabin floor were quickly under several inches of water. Nonsense, I replied, we are simply taking on water. I'm not sure it made them feel any better, though. We were very fortunate, however. A good Samaritan living in a nearby shore front home heard the impact and soon came out to rescue us from sinking. She towed us to Trexler's Marina, thus saving the boat from going to the bottom. $18k and the boat is now fixed. I can't say enough good things about both our Good Samaritan and BoatUS insurance. She was an extremely competent captain.The insurance company covered almost everything and we are very grateful. And, it makes for an interesting story! |
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#7 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Waltham Ma./Meredith NH
Posts: 4,236
Thanks: 2,293
Thanked 1,224 Times in 782 Posts
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#8 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,985
Thanks: 2,255
Thanked 784 Times in 560 Posts
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A few years ago, while fuel prices were increasing, kites were used on ocean-going ships to save about 20% in fuel costs. On some ships, the savings was passed to crew members. ![]() ![]() • Anne Quéméré kited across the North Atlantic (and Pacific) in an 18-foot boat—solo. To use the weather to her best advantage, the usual kite was used with the occasional sea anchor. ![]() Story and video at site: http://yachtpals.com/kite-sailing-boat-quemere-3095 • Ironically, it was a search for a missing US Navy "rescue ship" that resulted in a US Navy submarine becoming disabled itself, and being forced to sail into Hawaii: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_R-14_(SS-91) This is Anne Quéméré adventuring the North Atlantic:
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#9 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 33
Thanks: 10
Thanked 17 Times in 11 Posts
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A few years ago we were out on the lake after the end of the official season, the lake was low and there weren't many people around. I had rented a place on Patrician Shore Ct near Center Harbor and we had had to survey the lake by canoe to find the safe way to the dock because of the lack of clarity of the paper chart my friend, the owner of the Donzi 21C Regazza, insisted on using. John is old school, he works in technology, we met when I was mid twenties and we were both doing guided missile work. John learned to navigate with the British Army, so he takes great pride in getting around without technology in his home life. I learned as a Scout (Britain dropped Boy from the name decades ago), so I take what help I can get, to be certain. At that time, about ten years ago, the Google satellite images for the lake weren't great, the reflections from the water and low resolution made them almost useless. These days you can clearly see the dock and the deep water exit straight along the shoreline to the north east, and then rounding the point to the south east and into deep water.
Towards the end of the week John suggested we head over to Moultonborough Bay. It was a great day for being on the lake, there was only a slight breeze, it was a little chilly at around 60F but the lake was almost flat calm. This was before speed limits, so we were able to charge along at around 40 knots in open water. At Chase Point we could see everyone was going to the east around Melvin Island, but John prides himself on his navigation and insisted we just continue through The Graveyard. So I told him to take over. He refused, said it would 'do me good'. So I picked my way through, with the lake low those submerged rocks looked very very hard and close and the water between looks very deep. But no problem, we got through and out into open water again. Returning at moderate speed (25 knots?) I again suggested we take the deep water. "No, you've done it once, you can do it again." Hmm. That sounds like a recipe for disaster. On the way in I wasn't convinced that keeping to the marked channel had had us far enough from the rocks, but fair enough, it's his boat. So back down to a couple of knots, and I picked my way through the five(!!!) sets of buoys again. After clearing the last set the water looked deep and dark again. Escaped. After crawling along a little further the boss told me to go ahead. OK, great. Everyone sitting down? No traffic? Full power! The sudden intake roar, 275hp to the beautiful Duoprop. The stern dug in, we started to climb out onto the plane again... bump. Vibration. Nothing spectacular. Power off and engine off and tilt the drive up and it's a different story. The Volvo Duoprop was pretzeled. Fortunately it still provided some drive. So we crawled all the way back at low speed. Post mortem found that not only were the props bent but the inner shaft was also bent. Suddenly it was all my fault, and I happily offered to pay to fix the thing, but John wouldn't hear of that. So I asked him the drive model, intending to just send him the parts. He knew he was in the wrong and wouldn't hear of that. After a few days his wife told him "you know it was your own fault, stop being a jerk about it" and that was the end of the matter. Back home I checked the charts. That day on the lake there was only a straight shot through five sets of buoys, but where I went straight ahead there should have been a sixth set offset marking a slight dogleg to port. Well. There you go. We should have taken the safe route. That incident gave me an abiding love of jet drives. Last edited by geordie; 02-28-2017 at 03:27 PM. Reason: Clarity and accuracy. |
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#10 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Waltham Ma./Meredith NH
Posts: 4,236
Thanks: 2,293
Thanked 1,224 Times in 782 Posts
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