Dumb Human Tricks (THE ORIGINAL POST)

Cap'n Ron

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Joined
Jun 4, 2002
Messages
7
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

These are some of the dumbest things I've ever seen...keep in mind, the first four were done by a *licensed* charter boat captain (no, not me)<br /><br />1) Heading back to the marina one night after an afternoon charter, the uber-captain is drunk, along with the passengers. Blows through a no-wake zone and under a bridge at cruising speed. Clips a wooden marker designating the no-wake zone boundary on the other side. Cuts the marker off at the water line, and shears off a two-foot-wide section of the port side of his 25' Aquasport. Makes it to the marina 5 minutes later, and runs the boat onto the launch ramp to keep it from sinking. Customers gave him an extra $200 for making the trip "enjoyable".<br /><br />2) Same captain, new boat. This time, he's in a 25' Contender. He, a friend, and I are out at the tripod (which actually has five legs, not three...go figure) getting bait for his charter the next day. He's on the bow, I'm at the controls. Incoming tide, and we're facing toward shore. He gets the cast net stuck on the tripod, so I'm stuck holding the boat in position, stern facing the waves, for a good 8 minutes while he tries to free himself. Can't move anywhere, lest he lose the net. The back of the transom has a cut-out, so the twin-225 outboards can be raised up. Well, the waves are now coming into the boat. But nooo, heaven forbid I move the boat a little bit to stay afloat. By the time he gets the net free, I'm standing waist-deep in seawater, a good three miles from shore (between the bilge pumps, my friend bailing with a 5-gallon bucket, and me bailing with one hand while holding position with the other, we're barely able to stay afloat). To this day, I can't believe we made it back to shore, but, at least he didn't lose his net. :cool: <br /><br />3) Same captain, different day. This time, he, his first mate and myself are in a 30' Luhrs running 15 miles offshore. He's up on the fly bridge driving, while the first mate and I are down below eating breakfast. *Thump* Boat comes to a stop. Hard aground on a sandbar fifteen miles offshore. Captain and I go over to see if the props are damaged (amazingly, no damage), and to try to figure out how to get off. Now, he's on a **** fly bridge. How could he NOT see the sandbar, let alone one this shallow (came up to my knees). At full throttle, a good 80% of the boat's length is hard aground on the sandbar. Weighs too much to rock it off, can't back it off, and too large a surface area to dig out. So, we killed four hours waiting for high tide. At high tide, two hours of digging was enough to get us off the sandbar.<br /><br />4) Fishing in a kingfish tournament with the genius captain. We've caught a few small kingfish, nothing worth weighing in. Hook another one. The water is emerald green, and crystal clear. About 30 feet to the bottom, and we can see all the way down. Flash in the water, and now we have only a kingfish head on the toher end of the line. So, the captain locks his feet around the rungs of the ladder leading up to the fly bridge, 5 foot gaff in hand, and the first mate starts bobbing the kingfish head up and down in the water. The captain is hanging off the side of the boat trying to free-gaff a barracuda.<br /><br />5) We had a no-name storm come through here a few years ago. Everyone went down to the marina to watch the surge come in. Well, someone eventually realizes that all the boats on the center dock (which is covered) still have their bimini tops up. I volunteer to go down the dock and lower all the bimini tops, and a friend goes with me. Simple enough, except for one problem: the surge is high enough that we are forced to swim down the dock. Now, I don't know about you, but getting into 40-some-odd boats from the water with no ladder isn't my idea of fun. We couldn't get into the boats normally, so we rigged a grappling hook. Tossed it over a cross-brace, scaled the rope boot-camp style, lowered the bimini, and swung over to the next boat. Release the grapple, and do it all over again. As if this isn't bad enough, when we finish up, we stopped to catch our breath. Look down into the water, and here's two sand sharks that seem to have lost their way and wound up in the marina. So much for swimming back. Leap-frogged from one boat to another all the way back.<br /><br />6) Dumbest thing I've ever seen also happened at this marina. They'd been working on this guy's boat for a good month. Every time they fixed something, they'd break two more things. Eventually, they think they have everything fixed. Dock it, and go home for the night. The next morning, everyone is complaining that the center dock smells like gas (uh-oh). Trace the smell back to his boat (not good). Somehow, the mechanic managed to rupture the fuel line and never realized it. Three inches of gasoline are now present in the bottom of the boat (this is getting worse). Now, how do you move a 28' boat across a marina and onto a trailer without an engine, and without making anything spark? With a wooden pole, of course. Four hours and three shifts later, the boat is at the launch ramp. Now, getting a boat that size onto a trailer is no picnic to begin with, but it's doable. Now, doing it without an engine is even more fun.<br /><br />7) Same, mechanic more stupid acts. He's working on a motor, and sets a screwdriver on top of a spinning flywheel. Screwdriver goes flying off, and winds up embedding itself in another boat. Needless to say, the mechanic was fired two days later =)<br /><br />8) One of the workers is trailering a boat to do some touch-up work to it. He gets the boat onto the trailer, and puts the truck in gear. Except, it wasn't the gear he wanted. He puts in Neutral, and goes sliding backward. Boat is floating, the trailer is angled down, and the truck is resting on the bottom.<br /><br />9) One of the salesmen is taking a potential customer out on a trial run of a pre-owned boat that the mechanics had done some work on. They get out into the channel, open the throttle, and the outboard goes roaring off, leaving the boat sitting there. Apparently the mechanics hadn't fully secured the outboard.<br /><br />10) The funniest thing I've ever seen happened a few weeks ago. Saw an inboard become an outboard. I don't know what happened, but the back of the boat literally exploded.<br /><br />11) As for my own dumbest thing ever, I'd say this qualifies as all-out brainless. We'd been out fishing all day, and as we were making our way back to the marina, we hit a section of beach with the most incredible looking water I've ever seen. Crystal clear, all the way down. We're hot, so we decide to go swimming. Stayed in for about half an hour. As we're getting out, I decide to make one dive down to the bottom to see if I can find anything interesting. Hovering a few feet off the floor. Look left, see a shark. Look right, see two sharks. Look behind me, see another shark. All were about 300 yards off. Made it to the surface and out of the water in record time :cool: Got a good look at them once I was out of the water. All hammerheads, ranging from 10 to 20 feet (near as we could tell).
 
D

DJ

Guest
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Cap'n Ron,<br /><br />You're not the same Cap'n Ron from the movie-are you? :D <br /><br />Please let us know where that marina is so we can steer clear. :eek:
 

Bob_VT

Moderator & Unofficial iBoats Historian
Staff member
Joined
May 19, 2001
Messages
26,065
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Winessed a stupid human trick and a very exspensive one at that, yesterday.<br /><br />I was waiting to launch my boat while another boat was at the ramp. This man and family unloaded and he went to retrieve his trailer. When he returned with his trailer he was attempting to back it onto the ramp (backing to the passenger side - truck drivers know this is just a pain) it took him about an honest 5 minutes of jack-knifing pulling forward. It was sad but I guess we all have to learn. When he finally gets the trailer on the ramp he backs it right into his own boat!! :eek: The trailer is completely submerged and his trucks back wheels are in 8-10 inches of water :confused: <br /><br />Get out of his truck yells at his family and then proceeds to load the boat under power onto the trailer. This was a horrible choice on his part.<br /><br />The first attempt he missed the trailer off to one side, the second the same way on the third the obvious answer was MORE POWER. SLAM!!! past the trailer tongue into his tailgate :eek: <br /><br />Solution, yell at the family. Finally he bets the boat loaded (no where close to straight) and of course spins his wheels trying to get out. Shifts into 4x4 and pops the truck, boat and trailer out.<br /><br />Between the scratches in his boat and his smashed tailgate it was evidence to lack of experiance.<br /><br />I ran the scenario through my head trying to make sense of it all. I wondered if the guy should be boating? I think he needs a few classes in anger management and driving then attempt the boating scene again.<br /><br />On-lookers were willing to help but he kept shaking his head no and showing signs of becoming more aggressive.<br /><br />So if you are ever in the market for a 19' Regal with bow scratches and damage or a full size Chevy king cab with an unusual dent in the tailgate... You have the answer.<br /><br />Bob
 

UmmaGumma

Cadet
Joined
Sep 24, 2002
Messages
9
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Fishing on really windy days is not the way to go.<br /><br />Buddy was having hard time with Girlfriend and wanted to get out on the lake. I told him that the 20 mph winds might cause a problem, but he had a favorite spot for Walleyes and begged me to take him out. So, in his apparent time of weakness, I agreed.<br /><br />Needless to say his favorite spot is across the lake to the point where we have to go straight against the wind to get back to the launch. No big deal, I figured..we'd be out for a while and maybe the wind would die down. If not, we can cruise the shorlines with crank baits.<br /><br />Well, I wasn't to familiar with this lake (Lake Madison, southern Mn), but it looked pretty straight forward. So we hit this bay, start throwing spinners, nice spot out of the wind. Trouble is nothing's hitting. So he pulls up the anchor and we start to drift. <br /><br />I see an island about 100 feet ahead of us, so I start the Minnkota and move us forward. We're a good distance from the island but the gusts are moving us pretty good (it's about 50 degrees outside), so I concentrate on getting us out of the line of the island. I trim the motor up just in case, but I'm thinking that we are a good ways away where we don't have to worry too much...well, I should have looked at the depthfinder.<br /><br />Next think I know the wind had pushed us broadside against a sand bar that shouldn't have been there. And the waves are coming, getting the two of us soaked (15 foot fiberglass tri-hull, smaller boat). I try to oar us off, but not even close..the oar sinks in the muck. I figure the muck is pretty soft, so I trim down teh motor in a hurry to get us from getting too wet, and I throw down the throttle. It just spins and spins.....So I push it further. To no avail. So she's fully gunned, and dirty, mucky water is going everywhere, the wind blowing it into my face, my eyes, and the **** boat isn't going anywhere. And what do you know, I've lost the pee-stream from my motor...so I keep gunning it, and she's gonna overheat.<br /><br />So I get roll up the jeans and hop out. I sink about a foot into the muck, and I have to somehow push my boat off of this crap. It's tough, but them my shoe falls off from the suction. Screw it, barefooted works better anyway. So I take the other shoe off and toss it into the boat.<br /><br />After a few steps and a **** of a lot of effort, I get the boat free..she's moving!! So I hop in and my buddy gets the Minnkota into the water and gets us out into the open water.<br /><br />Trouble is that the motor's only 40 pounds thrust, virtually useless against the wind. And we've got about 2 miles to go AGAINST the wind just to get back to the dock. AND IT'S GONNA RAIN!<br /><br />What do you do? I say screw the motor, let her overheat...at 35 mph I can get to the dock in 4 minutes...so we goin against wind, full blast (or what I thought should be full blast), but we're not doing anything close to 35....So I trim it up to see what's going on. Well, running the prop through the sand left it a few chunks shy of a full blade.<br /><br />So I cruise in my non-water circulating boat over to the shore and kill it as fast as I can. Motor never got to hot to touch, so maybe it was just the pisser that was clogged. And I tie on a rope and DRAG my boat about a mile through the wind, cold water, and muck to a point where the wind was calm enough to use the old Minnkota to get us back to the dock.<br /><br />Moral of the story: I have no idea.
 

Jim@KSC

Petty Officer 3rd Class
Joined
Nov 1, 2002
Messages
89
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Chokoloskee, what a rush! <br /><br />My son and I couldn't leave until around 10 PM since it was my daughter's birthday. No sweat, 250 miles is a piece of cake when a full moon and hundreds of snook are waiting. <br /><br />About 50 miles out I ask Chris to check the tides. He misread, I estimated wrong about the time, etc. <br /><br />Insert boat in water. Mosquitoes everywhere; rush job; don't notice water level. <br /><br />Unwisely decided to take the back side of Rabbit key. Moon ducks behind a cloud, now running partially on instruments. Kind of hard to see with these bifocals.<br /><br />Out of the corner of my eye, I notice Chris clench up. Huh?<br /><br />When we hit the sandbar, at 30 MPH, it was 2' out of the water and 8' wide. Good slope, though. <br /><br />Airborne, engine screaming. Found water again and I was too shocked to stop.<br /><br />Looked at son and instinctively knew his thoughts...<br />"Did he MEAN to do that?"<br /><br />When we went back to look we found three grooves on the front side, a 2" groove at the top and clear sand on the back side.<br /><br />Felt like James Bond after we stopped laughing.<br /><br />I don't cut behind Rabbit anymore.
 

bideker

Recruit
Joined
Nov 5, 2002
Messages
2
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Many years ago my dad and I made a week-long safe trip to the lake. When arriving back home and backing the car into the driveway, the motor was still down and the result was seeing/hearing the motor fold underneath the trailer as he hit the concrete driveway breaking the propellar and breaking the shaft of the motor. Ouch....
 

meant2be

Seaman
Joined
Nov 10, 2002
Messages
53
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Couldn't believe it while I was watching it.<br /><br />Two guys down in Florida thought you don't need a boat to go skiing. One in the waterway (canal)on skis and the other in his truck with the rope tied to the bed. The first amazing thing was the guy actually got up without be pulled sideways into the bank. Things looked good for the first 300' until the TELEPHONE POLE !!!! Poor guy was dumb enough to not let go. I watched him speed up and hit the bank head on. The second amazing thing is that he stood up, face bloodied and the front of his suit carrying about 20 lbs. of fresh bank topsoil. I'm pretty sure he was matching it in the rear with his own contribution. His buddy comes back and is laughing his a$$ off. What are friends for?!!
 

fishmaycraft

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Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
25
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

When I was a kid, Dad and I were taking our twenty footer out for a test ride after spending what seemed to me like all summer working on it. Since it was late in the year it was getting cold so we got the bright idea to disconnect the bow line before the boat got into the water so dad wouldn't get wet. I get into the boat at the top of the ramp and back down we go... The trailer got a little too much to one side so dad stops to pull up and straighten it out, guess what, boat and son go flying off the trailer and sliding down the wet ramp. Luckily some other folks helped us lift the boat back onto the trailer to winch it up and go home.<br /><br />Fast forward 15 years<br /><br />I have a 19ft maycraft, heading about 9 miles out to do some king fishing by myself. After catching 2 sharks I'm hooked into my third and I let him rap the line and wire leader around my still turning prop. Didn't feel like jumping in the water (remember the sharks) so I tilt the motor all the way up and lay upside down on it with the only tool I have, a multipurpose tool on my belt. 45 minutes later I realize I joined sea tow for a reason and grabbed the radio only to realize it doesn't transmitt at all! After quite some time I'm free of tangle and mad at a day of lost fishing, deciding to head home I try to start the outboard,,,nothing,,,After an onslaught to profanity heard only by myself I realized when the engine died it was in gear!!! Quick pull of the throttle and I was off to kiss the ground!!
 

kenimpzoom

Rear Admiral
Joined
Jul 13, 2002
Messages
4,807
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

I all mine.<br /><br />Fishing in my fathers I/O boat in Trinity Bay (Houston, TX). Well a big freighter comes along and somehow a huge wave is created (still dont know where it came from). Dad fires up the boat to put the bow into it, but forgot about anchor. Had bow into wave, but the anchor line pulled us broadside to wave. It pushed us right into another boat chipped the guys fiberglass and filled us up with water. After exchanging info from the guys boat, we realized the bilge is full of water, and no bilge pump. So we start hightailing it back to the dock. Halfway into the dock, WHEEEEE, damn lower unit goes. Had to idle all the way in. Got to dock finally, and the boat was sold soon thereafter.<br /><br />Ken
 

brokenboat

Seaman
Joined
Nov 9, 2002
Messages
69
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

True Story<br /><br />I guess in every community there is the local boat builder. The place where you can have a custom boat made at a 'good deal.' Here in Southern Louisiana we have many. Anyway, a fella I know purchased a new bay boat from a local builder and took it on it's maiden voyage. After several minutes through the 'no wake' zone he throttled it up and was on a nice plane when he and his passenger heard a tremendous crash astern. A glance back revealed the transom and motor were about 100 yards back and sinking fast! It wasn't such a good deal after all.
 
Joined
Nov 24, 2002
Messages
23
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

First time owner of my new speedboat. Took the family for a run, got confused between the red channel marker and red/white danger marker.<br /><br />So went to port side of the marker. Guess what, quickly parked the boat on rocks doing 30MPH which the danger marker was highlighting!<br /><br />The prop -what was left of it was just a mangled hub! Amazing how a bit of twisted blade on a hub got us back to the ramp.<br /><br />I wonder what's worse, the embarrasment of doing something stupid, or the commentary all the way home from the missus??<br /><br />At the ramp one day noticed a chap was taking longer than usual at the ramp trying to put his boat in. Backing in, then driving out and quickly backing in to fetch the boat.<br /><br />Yep, he forgot that plug! He came over and offered $10.00 for my plug! I kindly offered my spare for 'free'. Saw him later in the day upon which he returned my 'loan' plug.<br /><br />Moral of the story, always keep a spare. In times of need, they're worth there weight in gold.
 

upstate

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Dec 4, 2002
Messages
32
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

darn funny reading. am I the only guy that has wrpped his prop with a dock line more than once. i would sure feel stupid
 

Homerr

Commander
Joined
Mar 4, 2002
Messages
2,294
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Well, as I'm still somewhat new to the boating world, I haven't had many chances to enter the realm of 'Stupid Human'<br /><br />I told myself a bazillion times I wouldn't leave the drive down... I even pounded my kids heads' Don't let me leave the drive down..<br />Working at Marlin, I've seen my share of busted, bent, and mangled skegs...<br /><br />Well, you guess it...I left it down.<br /><br />Good thing is, the trailer sits fairly high, and you can actually leave the drive fully down and it won't touch the ground even under a big bounce.<br /><br />PHEW!<br /><br />Now the funny part...<br /><br />Shortly after I pulled into the tie down area, and noticed my drive was still down, I hear the all inspiring sound....<br /><br />SCREEEEECHHHHHHHH !!!<br /><br />The guy coming out of the water behind me left his down too! Funny part was (kinda) I heard his wife say: " Well, that other guy had his drive down and drove away"!!!<br /><br />Hahhaah<br /><br />No, I'm not going after Women vs. boats. Ive seen some Women run boats up on the trailer without blinking an eye and get it right the first try.<br /><br />Aah yes, and the rope vs. propeller. <br />Been there, done that while crabbing in Coos Bay Oregon.<br />I got the rope loose, but by that time I drug my trap almost into the deep channel. A quick response on my GPS to mark the trap saved it. Came back later at low tide to retrieve the trap.<br /><br />And YES, I looked around to see if I was spotted untangling the mess!<br /><br />And lastly...<br /><br />I drop anchor one time at a high lake (Lake of the Woods-Southern Oregon)<br />After fishing, I tried to pull the anchor up. It was barley moving, yet it didn't feel snagged.<br />I pulled with all my might, and found that part of my anchor picked up a wire of some sort. Looked like an underwater telephone line.<br />Almost mad enough to cut it, but I didn't want to be entered into the Darwin Awards !<br /><br />H.
 

sprithunter

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Nov 22, 2002
Messages
37
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Summer of 2001 I finally got my Grandfather's 72 Sea Sprite out of the yard and in the water for the first time in about 3 years. Well, on one outing yes I forgot to put the plug in. (Even after being badgered by the wife)We decided on a beautiful August day to entertain some friends. The afternoon went fine until it was time to trailer the boat. I decided to play it cool and crank the boat up without getting wet. Well my feet slipped on the wet trailer and I caught my leg on the top of the winch tower. Least to say ouch! after 2 hours in the Emergency Room and 10 stitches, crutches, and a week off of work that I couldn't fish. Everything got back to normal. Now I just get my feet wet. Oh yeah, I did manage to finish trailering the boat before the visit to the emergency room. And yes I got about 3 inches from vaulable body parts. Lesson well learned. :eek: :rolleyes:
 

beermunk

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Jun 20, 2004
Messages
146
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

not something i did, but boating on lake superiour with my family last summer... <br /><br />my parents have a large mini-yacht that fits all eight of us nicely, except that my doctor brother hates how slow my father drives, so he trailers his own 23' cabin cruiser all the way from milwaukee to bayfield (for those that don't know wisconsin, that's basically from the south eastern corner to the north western corner)<br /><br />so after a night of unloading, we all get ready to go island hopping the next day. everyone is up early in the morning, we eat breakfast and get headed out. my brother has also brought other toys with him for this weekend, including a couple sea kyacks and a two person tube (tubing on the great lakes is one hell of an experience!)<br /><br />so about a mile out we see my brother stop his boat and re-adjust all his toys tied to his boat. he then catches up and we're back cruising. then again, we see him slow to a stop and start messing with his crap.<br /><br />my father says "screw it, he knows where we're going" so for the next 10 minutes we keep traveling but we eventually notice that he's still back where he stopped the second time. so we turn the boat around and punch it to get back to him and see WTF is the problem. <br /><br />we pull up to the boat and his nurse wife is putting a compression bandage on his leg. the fool had been on the bow of his boat, adjusting a rope when he had steped backwards, right through an open window of the cabin. now he had an eight inch gash which required stitches, and not only had to go back to the marina, dock his boat, but get in his car and drive 1/2 hour to the nearest hospital.<br /><br />it was late afternoon by the time they met us back up on one of the islands.
 

mkuehnl

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Feb 22, 2002
Messages
103
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

I guess we shold give him credit for putting the plug in his boat....
 

texasfishon

Cadet
Joined
May 15, 2004
Messages
12
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

ok look but didn't see:<br /><br />1. anyone ever see what a ss prop on an evenrude gt 150 does if you forget to remove an aluminum motor toter? i have.<br /><br />2. my wifes cousin (rodney) decided to take out his dads 24' cuddy on lake livingston tx. for a day of sking with me an my wife. hooks it up to his 20 year old international scout (with no shocks) and we take off for the ramp, half way there we go down this hill to a bridge that goes over a finger of the lake. as we hit the decline the trailer starts to sway and begains to pull the scout around, i quickly tell him "NOT TO HIT THE BRAKES"! <br />HE HIT THE BRAKES and the scout jerks to the left and heads straight toward the gaurd rail, we stop with mear inches between the front bumper and the rail.<br />the boat leaves the trailer and continues in the proper lane and comes to a stop 100 yards down the road still in the right lane.<br />the trailer after being shead of its load and poping loose from the scout, flips over, pushing the winch post to the side (it bolted on).<br />well, we have both lanes block so not allowing any time for our knees to stop shaking we pull the scout to the trailer and with the extra adrenaline we flip the trailer upright hook it to the scout and pull it to the front of the boat. we wrench the winch back to vertical and play out the cable to the boat.<br />the trailer has those popup rollers were you pull the lever on the side of the trailer to raise the rollers above the bunks so we put them up and begain cranking.<br />by now we have an audience four young folk (late teens/early twentys)that are helping by steading the boat on its keel as rodney and i take turns cranking on the winch and one older couple, the female of wich keeps saying ya'll will never git that boat back on the trailer you'll need a cherry picker, i finialy had enough of her and told her she could help or leave but that was her only choices! they left.<br />my turn on the winch again and we have the bow off the pavement and rising over the first roller. she gets higher and then comes down flat, i had my back to the boat cranking on the winch as she came down on the rollers and snaped that lever back to the rollers "down" position catching me at the back of my knees and putting me flat on the concreet!<br />a little rigging with drift wood (one bunk broke) and the ski rope and we made it back to the house with only minor scrapes to me and the boat!
 

jtexas

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Oct 13, 2003
Messages
8,646
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

hasn't anyone else ever tried to drive away from the trailer without detatching the safety chains?<br /><br />luckily the sound of skidding wheel chocks always stops me before any damage is done!
 

tryan

Seaman
Joined
May 29, 2004
Messages
59
Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

great thread guys.<br /><br />my cure to the plug problem is to put the boat keys in a baggie with the plug. <br /><br />story #1.<br /><br />i have been around boats for 30 years and a boat owner for 20. i like inboards and own three. if it floats, that is good enough for me.<br /><br />my brother bought a used 22' formula with a black anchor 350 last fall just in time to winterize and put her up for the winter. i took the drive in for a check up and new seals and waited for spring. i put the drive on and adjsut a few things and deem her seaworthy.<br /><br />his toyota is lacking, so i pull her with my 250 and we have a great day out on the water. she'll run 38 or so on the gps, so i told him we could try a different prop next time out. i ski and lost the dropped ski and the kids ride the tube. my brother is thinking, isn't owning a boat a joy..........<br /><br />i back the trailer in but the water is low making the ramp angle steep. the bow is about a foot off the rest, but i tell my brother that it's okay. i can just jab the brakes and scoot the boat up. i have to do it with the ski boat EVERYTIME. we are about a mile from the ramp at the first downhill section of the road, so i give the brakes a squeeze. she slides right up to the stop. excellent. my brother opens the door of the truck while the truck is still moving. he wants to tighten the winch, but i told him to wait untill we get to the wide spot in the road. it was too late. BAM. she slid off the trailer right in the middle of the road. i folded the winch support and the transom strap could not hold the boat.<br /><br />six hours, two wreckers and 250 bucks later the boat is back on the trailer. i told the kids that they would be telling their grandchildren about that day and my eleven year old said, 'heck, i'm trying to forget it right now.'<br /><br /><br />i patched up the gel and get a beefier bow winch bar made. on her second voyage (for us), she gets up to 53.5 on the gps. i guess we showed her who was the boss.<br /><br /><br />story #2.<br /><br />a buddy (who ran over me after i fell off the front of a boat 25 years ago) bought a 19 foot grady and donated the old boston whaler to another friend. i put a power pack on her and she ran great untill that one faithful night. the wiring harness fried when the rectifier went bad. we where only a mile or so from the ramp, so my bright idea was to by pass the starter interlock and run the starter with the boat in gear. that was good for about 100 yards. i paddled for 2 hours and 45 minutes straight. my wife, to this day, still does not believe me. i say 'i swear' and she says ' yeah, right.'<br /><br />story #3.<br /><br />i have always been told by guys in the military that you can be courtmarshalled for leaving a diesel in gear. it seems that at extreme temps they can start by themselves ( i'm not sure if this is true.) i have owned diesels with manual trannys for 10 years and have always used the parking brake and a scotch/chalk.<br /><br />i prepped 10 other boats this spring and it was time to pull mine out of the barn. i put the impeller back in, replaced the belts and fired her up on the hose. i put the plug in and strap her down to the trailer and go to the closest ramp with my buddy that ran over me. <br /><br />he climbs in the boat and i back her in. i'm looking at the trailer guides, but she's not coming off the trailer. duh. transom straps.<br />i pull her back out and remove the straps. she floats this time. as i climb into the bed of the truck to loosen the turnbuckle, the truck door slams with an odd note. the truck is rolling back, cylinder by cylinder as i scramble into the cab. the parking brake mechanism failed and i had left the truck in first not reverse.
 

gkerfoot

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Jun 17, 2004
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Re: Dumb Human Tricks

Re: Dumb Human Tricks

My boating buddy and I picked up a couple of girls for an afternoon on the river. Pulling up to ramp we see a pickup truck backed into the water which is up over the seats. We're wondering how that came about when the girl with me says "Oh look! Somebody forgot to stop." She looked puzzled at our laughter.<br /><br />But I'm no genius either:<br />One afternoon we were following a towboat pushing barges. We were riding up and down the huge waves. Suddenly the frequency changed and we plowed the 15 ft. Starcraft squarely through the center of a wave. When we emerged the boat was full to the gunwhales and the 40 horse engine was sputtering. Finally, it cleared and the boat was barely moving and the bow way high at WOT. We climbed up onto the bow as far forward as we could get. This got us moving forward a little allowing one of us a chance to run back and turn the bailing plug a couple of turns, then run back to the bow. Eventually, the plug was removed and the water drained for about an hour of bowriding while steering with feet. Didn't do that anymore!
 
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