Re: Is your wife a good boater ?
I was about to post a new thread related to the wife and the boat when I found this one. I have a bit different take on this....I have the helpful yet over-confident wife and I would like to ask what you would do or how you would try to teach without getting chewed out.
My wife had no boating experience prior to our first boat together last year. I had some from many years with friends with boats prior to our getting one boat as a gift and then buying another last year.
She is great with all of the preparations...food, cooler, towels, sunscreen, organizing the friends, etc. every time we go out. I do all of the backing, but we taught her (with the help of an experienced friend of ours in the boat for the first few times) how to take the boat off of the trailer and pick me up at the dock and then to drop me at the dock and go back onto the trailer with a bit of verbal coaching from me on the ramp. This all works out just fine.
HOWEVER - she loves to drive the boat. The problem is, she doesn't know all that much about it, won't listen to me "because I drive like a "grandma" and am "too cautious", and then gets mad when I try to explain the why she should or shouldn't do something, especially when there are people in the boat with us. She believes that lots of slack and WOT is the ideal way to pull tubers because it is "more fun" and "you have to throw them off"..... I also hear phrases like "I wasn't too close to that boat / stump / bank / buoy / etc. , you are just being paranoid!" Or...."I was close enough to "no wake", if I go too slow it's hard to steer".
She doesn't understand why it isn't acceptable to pull tubers / skiers close enough to docks to throw major wakes.
She was coming around to pick me up from a ski run, crossed over the rope, cut the new rope, spun the prop and stalled the motor, and with me sitting there dead in the water 50 yards away from the boat yelling at her to stop, fires it back up and limps over to me.....where I have to untangle and fix the newly created mess. I don't think she will do that again.
I think that I have convinced her to take the optional DNR boater's safety course this year before the water warms up enough to get out. Other than just absolutely saying - "NO - YOU CAN NOT DRIVE THE BOAT!!", which would probably give me some couch / doghouse time, how can I teach my wife to drive when she apparently knows it all already?