Ernest T
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2009
- Messages
- 367
I ran across a disabled boater on my way home yesterday and offered the guy a tow. The other boat was about the same size as mine (21 ft.), but was fully loaded with 9 people on board. I had 3 on mine. The poor guy was sitting in a fairly remote area and said he had been sitting there for hours (4 of the passengers were kids), and nobody on the boat had a cell phone, so no means to call for help. If that wasn't bad enough, he was on his brother-in-laws boat, was not familiar with the lake, and couldn't tell me exactly where he needed to go. We ended up going about 30 minutes in the wrong direction, before he figured that out.
Anyhow, this was the first time I'd towed another boat and I have some questions. I tied the tow rope off to one of the stern eyes (on the starboard side) of my boat. I was surprised by just how hard it was to tow this boat. I realize that it was fully loaded, but my maximum speed was only around 9 mph. I don't know that I would have wanted to go too much faster, but I didn't have any option to find out. I had my passengers move to the bow, but the stern of my boat was really low during the tow and the boat was listing because the tow rope was tied to one side. I have a Yamaha F150 and it was really low in the water during the tow. The whole process took over 1.5 hours to get the guy back to his dock.
I know that this will not be the last time I end up needing to tow a disabled boat, but I hope that I'm better prepared next time. I'm thinking if I had a "Y" harness that would have better distributed the weight, and would have help prevent my boat from listing. What about moving some of the passengers from the disabled boat to my boat for the tow? Would that have made any difference, or is it worth the hassle? Is there a maximum save speed for towing? Any other suggestions?
Thanks!
Anyhow, this was the first time I'd towed another boat and I have some questions. I tied the tow rope off to one of the stern eyes (on the starboard side) of my boat. I was surprised by just how hard it was to tow this boat. I realize that it was fully loaded, but my maximum speed was only around 9 mph. I don't know that I would have wanted to go too much faster, but I didn't have any option to find out. I had my passengers move to the bow, but the stern of my boat was really low during the tow and the boat was listing because the tow rope was tied to one side. I have a Yamaha F150 and it was really low in the water during the tow. The whole process took over 1.5 hours to get the guy back to his dock.
I know that this will not be the last time I end up needing to tow a disabled boat, but I hope that I'm better prepared next time. I'm thinking if I had a "Y" harness that would have better distributed the weight, and would have help prevent my boat from listing. What about moving some of the passengers from the disabled boat to my boat for the tow? Would that have made any difference, or is it worth the hassle? Is there a maximum save speed for towing? Any other suggestions?
Thanks!