Never again

Dave-R

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 18, 2008
Messages
441
Yesterday we were boating at Lake Powell up by Rainbow bridge. We thought we would take in one more canyon before we headed back to Antelope point. We got down to the end of Cathedral Canyon, and my Four Winns boat died. Acted like a bad fuel pump. My Son in law was driving it with his family. I was in our Cobalt 226, and we hurried and tied off, and started a slow tow in tight canyon. It was about 6:30 PM. What would of been a great ride home, was now a great worry for all. I had what I thought to be about 25 gallons of gas, and a some 7 gallons in cans. I was now towing an 18' boat and had 50 miles to go. I could get about 8 miles per hour, with 13 kids and Adults . And it was getting Dark. I wasted a half hour of light by fueling at dangling rope marina, but I couldn't risk running out of gas. so at 7:30 pm, and 40 miles to go off I went. About this time we were able to text my other son in law who just pulled his boat out at Antelope to come and get the kids. He was able to meet us at 24 miles out and getting dark. I kept the skinniest Son in law and sent the rest in the rescue boat. I had a real good docking rope tied to the four Winns, and to this I had a long heavy rope tied to the Cobalt two tie down u-bolts. I gave her the throttle and by heck the 320 hp. Duoprop had us planning at about 23mph. with no effort. With my Son in law watching the tow boat, we able almost make Antelope before dark. The last 1/2 hour was in the dark, and even with our hand held light, and at wakeless speed, it was awful. We did all make it back and loaded up okay, but I kept wondering if I had made the right choice. I had a marine radio, but was unsure if this was an emergency to call for help. I have towed many boats before, and at a safe speed. I would not recommend this practice to anyone, but it saved me four more hours of pitch black. By the way the flashing lights on the channel buoys were a life saver. Dave-R
 

MTboatguy

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Jul 8, 2010
Messages
8,988
Bad experience, I hate being on the water after dark, but it sounds like you handled it very well and nobody is the worse for wear, but it is an unnerving situation when it happens.
 

littlerayray

Lieutenant
Joined
Feb 17, 2013
Messages
1,456
Wow good on ya I would have called pan pan pan and let the cg or anyone listening know what was going on but what you did was fine because you were taking care of a situation
 

gm280

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Jun 26, 2011
Messages
14,605
Some times you have to do what you think is best. As it worked out, everybody was fine and the event is experiences now that will stay with you forever. A cool level head goes a long way when things happen out of our control. Seems you were up to handling that event... :thumb:
 

smokeonthewater

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Dec 3, 2009
Messages
9,838
I can't see any reason to call anyone.... Kinda like calling AAA to tell them your buddy is giving you a jump start... You had a stranded vessel and a rescue vessel and had the situation well in hand. Nobody else would have done anything more than simply tow you in except maybe hand you a big tow bill.
 

lncoop

Vice Admiral
Joined
Apr 18, 2010
Messages
5,147
Bad experience, I hate being on the water after dark, but it sounds like you handled it very well and nobody is the worse for wear, but it is an unnerving situation when it happens.


Just curious. Why do y'all hate being on the water after dark? I love it. One of my favorite things to do is fire up the grill just before sunset and stay out really late, occasionally even all night. Are there concerns out west that we don't have here?
 

littlerayray

Lieutenant
Joined
Feb 17, 2013
Messages
1,456
I don't like being out after dark in my area cuz of the smuggling they go out at night with no nav lights at wot been a lot of close calls it's getting better now but there's still a risk
 

Alumarine

Captain
Joined
Feb 22, 2005
Messages
3,760
Sounds like it all worked out well.
No harm, no foul.
You could have always just slept on the boat.
 
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