FELIXTHECAT
Cadet
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2003
- Messages
- 16
Hi, I just wanted to share with you all our first boating experience yesterday! My husband and I decide to take our boat out for a test spin to see how the motor works on our boat, 1964 Runabout with a 1958 Evinrude 35 hpw. It is a beautiful day in Minnesota, sunny, warm, but very windy? We make nothing of this and proceed to the lake. No problems getting it the lake(good), no problems unloading it (well just a little, but no biggie). We pull it up to the dock and start her up. She pops right off, we sit for a few minutes to see how it idles and make sure that the thermostat isnt getting hot etc. Finally it's time to go! We pull off the dock and are getting a great cruz and my husband decides to shut of the engine. I think he wanted to see how well it would restart, so he starts again, shuts off, starts again, shuts off, starts again, shuts off, st...., st....., st...... Damn battery drained? Hmmmm So we sit for a second, start it again, it starts. So he throws it in forward, it dies! I am panicing, trying to paddle into the current to keep us from beaching ourselves. My husband keeps trying to start the motor but as soon as he puts the throttle forward, or reverse, it dies, and now its running like crap. We by now the wind and current have beached us and as I am looking around at people staring at us (snickering Im sure), I look at the bow and notice that the eye hook rope is no longer bound on the bow. I mention this to my husband as he is trying to figure out what he cant tilt the motor up. Last resort, have to get wet in the cold windy water, he gets out, goes to the motor, and guess what? There is our rope, wrapped around the prop. After sort of laughing about it (at this point very frustrated), I hop out unhook the rope from the eye, we now have to hand walk to the boat out because the current and wind are so strong we cannot paddle our selves out far enough to start the motor. Finnally we get out, and wahlaa, the motor starts, but now wont go into gear. After messing with it he gets into gear and I just yell to him, just get us to the f***** dock, we will do this on a calm day I think. After that all went well. It was a very humiliating experience, but I am glad I found this forum, I now realize that even the most experienced boater runs into problems. <br />Later that day, we decided just to go down to the dock and just observe how people unload, load etc, and while we are there it turns out we had to pull 3 boats in to the dock, that had also dead motors. AT least we took our bad day and helped others. Hopefully next time wont be so bad.