[Rhodes22-list] Grounded My Boat on a Sandbar
EmailUser sloopblueheron
sloopblueheron at isp.com
Wed Nov 5 20:01:01 EST 2008
David,
Good story, but it looks like your message ran aground, too.
Rick
On Wed, Nov 5, 2008 at 7:41 PM, David Culp <dculp at hsbtx.com> wrote:
> After 3 years, I finally did it. My lake is shallow in places and I know
> most of the spots. The wind forecast was 10-20 mph with a cold front
> approaching but not forecast to arrive until the evening. The wind at that
> time was only supposed to pickup from 15 to 25 mph. 10-20 is my perfect
> forecast for Rhodes sailing and a friend was going out in his boat and we
> agreed to meet down the lake about 6 miles from where I slip.
>
> We met up and were going to have a race as we sometimes do. At the time,
> we
> were in a very narrow area and we were trying to sail into one of the
> bigger
> basins. To expedite getting there, I was cutting across and just adjacent
> to one of those shallow areas. As we rounded a bend in the lake, the front
> hit.
>
> We have a very sudden and dramatic wind change around to the north and my
> friend estimated that it was about 30 kts almost immediately. At the
> time,
> I had full main and about 150% of the jib out. Neither one of us could
> tack
> into it and my only option was a jibe toward the shallow area. The result
> was that I ended up in the shallows and sliding up on a sandbar in about a
> foot and half of water.
>
> I had the board out at the time and I wasn't moving very fast.
> Predictably,
> the boat just came to a smooth stop as the board retracted into the keel
> and
> then rolled over like a drunken whale to about 45 degrees. I had gotten
> most of the sails in by then thank goodness. The wind was blowing so hard
> at that point (we estimate between 30 and 40 mph), that I really thought
> the
> boat was going all the way over and so I secured everything and the just
> climbed up on the high side and sat there.
>
> My cellphone rings and my friend is asking "What are you going to do now"?
> I said " $#*t, I don't know what I am going to do"! What can you do? Have
> a drink I guess because surely nobody is going to come out on the lake and
> help in those conditions. It's not like I can wait for high tide either.
> Fortunately, I didn't have to ponder my situation very long.
>
> The wind let up a little bit and I convinced myself that the keel was heavy
> enough that the boat wasn't going to broach. I climbed down on the low
> side. With all that wind pushing on the hull and just enough water; my
> weight on the low side floated the boat just enough to where it eased off
> the sandbar. I used the motor to make a quick turn to get out of the
> shallow area. A quick assessment showed nothing had been damaged except my
> pride and now all we had to figure out was how to make the 6 miles back
> home.
>
> Now the wind is still blowing about 25 kts at this point and is out of the
> north. The waves are at least 2 feet or higher and I have never seen so
> many white caps on a lake. It's a reach and then a run home, so I must get
> back on this "horse" and be a sailboat again. On a b
> __________________________________________________
> To subscribe/unsubscribe or for help with using the mailing list go to
> http://www.rhodes22.org/list
> __________________________________________________
>
More information about the Rhodes22-list
mailing list