Stupid question, right?! Yesterday was our first full day on the water (we're new boaters, details below), and we had a blast. We went with some boating veteran friends - they had their own boat on the water - so we had anywhere from 4-7 people in our boat at various times. We were out on the water for about 2 1/2 hours, and spent an hour at a beach (had the boat anchored in shallow, calm water). For much of our time on the water we were towing kids on tubes.
At the end of the day as we pulled the boat out of the water, my friend was strapping down one side of the boat while I did the other. Then I reached over and started to unscrew the drain plug. He said "you remove the drain plug???" (we both store our boats in our garages). Just as I said "yeah, just to be safe" the plug came out and we were both surprised at how much water came out. I'm guessing it was a gallon or more.
I have absolutely no clue how that much water got in the boat. I checked the boat out thoroughly on the spot and couldn't find anything wrong. I checked it out again today when I was cleaning the boat and still couldn't find any glaring holes or "issues". Nothing seemed to go wrong on the water yesterday that would indicate we'd take on that much water. There are four small holes in the front of the bow where the previous owner had his trolling motor mounted - and I've yet to fill those holes. But heck, the kids sitting in the bow hardly got wet from spray/waves so I find it hard to believe we'd take on a gallon of water through those small screw holes.
Thoughts on what might cause this?...or how I check it out? Thanks.
1st and most important, ALWAYS remove your drain plug when transporting your boat, and pass that info along. It sounds like your friend doesn't remove his.
1st and most important, ALWAYS remove your drain plug when transporting your boat, and pass that info along. It sounds like your friend doesn't remove his.
My boat goes in a lift. Obviously I can't access the drain plug without getting in the water. Does it matter if there is a little bit of water in the bilge?
My boat goes in a lift. Obviously I can't access the drain plug without getting in the water. Does it matter if there is a little but of water in the bilge?
Most of you guys are more experienced boaters than me, so I'll keep an eye on how much water is dragged into the boat. There were certainly five kids going in/out of the boat on a regular basis, as were the tubes. It seems hard to believe that could account for a gallon or more...but maybe? It seemed like most of the water just sort of evaporated via the sun and wind. I do recall that when we anchored by the beach I reached into the center storage area (under the floor) where we keep the anchor and the skiis. It seemed like we had a normal amount of water in that area that I always see (maybe 1/2").
Is the bilge pump supposed to come on automatically? I have a switch on the dash that is for the bilge pump. I assumed that I was supposed to work that manually - no?
The purpose of the law is to stop people from transporting weeds and bilge water and the creatures that live in the water from one lake to another and spreading the alien species.
If you are only lifting your boat out of the water you are not Transporting the boat anywhere.
Not a law breaker.![]()