As with most of my posts, I humbly present the mistakes that I have made so that others don't have to suffer the same consequences. Today's lesson: if you don't have a working winch, you don't have a working trailer.
The backstory:
We've always struggled with our trailer, between lining up the keel into the tiny v-notch, and getting it far enough up the trailer to pull it out of the water, that the norm for us what to always pull the boat out with it about a foot or two back on the trailer. We never could quite get it all the way up into the cradle where the bow was nestled into the notch at the front of the trailer. And yet, we trailered it home just fine from the prior owner without any issues. After launching it and pulling it out of the water a few times, we accepted that having it a foot or two away from "properly nosed into the notch at the front of the trailer" was just fine.
So when we came back from a trip last summer and put it into the slip, it didn't seem like a big deal to us to realize that the winch handle had fallen off on our drive back from Lake Erie. We just unclipped the boat and launched it and drove it to the slip. When it came time to pull it out in October, I had forgotten about the winch handle being missing, but decided we could get it onto the trailer just fine if I gassed it pretty good.
This time, it didn't quite make it up to one or two feet from the front of the trailer, and without a winch, I figured that it would just have to do. As it turns out, it was a lot further back on the trailer than I realized standing at the boat ramp, but without a winch handle, what else could I do? I tried gassing it up further, but figured that it wasn't that big of a deal.
We drove it over to the marina and were dropping it off so that they could power wash it, and then they were going to drive it to dry storage for us. When it came time to remove the trailer from the hitch ball, the trailer shot up like a canon straight in the air.
This is a MASSIVE list of "fortunatelys" that you DON'T want to have to hope for, so I'll reiterate the lesson I wanted to share with everyone: if you don't have a working winch, you don't have a working trailer. And, you absolutely need to get these boats up on the trailer before you take them out of the water.
The backstory:
We've always struggled with our trailer, between lining up the keel into the tiny v-notch, and getting it far enough up the trailer to pull it out of the water, that the norm for us what to always pull the boat out with it about a foot or two back on the trailer. We never could quite get it all the way up into the cradle where the bow was nestled into the notch at the front of the trailer. And yet, we trailered it home just fine from the prior owner without any issues. After launching it and pulling it out of the water a few times, we accepted that having it a foot or two away from "properly nosed into the notch at the front of the trailer" was just fine.
So when we came back from a trip last summer and put it into the slip, it didn't seem like a big deal to us to realize that the winch handle had fallen off on our drive back from Lake Erie. We just unclipped the boat and launched it and drove it to the slip. When it came time to pull it out in October, I had forgotten about the winch handle being missing, but decided we could get it onto the trailer just fine if I gassed it pretty good.
This time, it didn't quite make it up to one or two feet from the front of the trailer, and without a winch, I figured that it would just have to do. As it turns out, it was a lot further back on the trailer than I realized standing at the boat ramp, but without a winch handle, what else could I do? I tried gassing it up further, but figured that it wasn't that big of a deal.
We drove it over to the marina and were dropping it off so that they could power wash it, and then they were going to drive it to dry storage for us. When it came time to remove the trailer from the hitch ball, the trailer shot up like a canon straight in the air.
- Fortunately, we were not parked on the ramp, otherwise the boat and trailer would have gone rolling into the water.
- Fortunately, I wasn't leaning over the trailer when I released the hitch, or I would have been launched into the air as well.
- Fortunately, when the boat tipped back (with the mast up) it rested on the frame of the trailer, and none of the fiberglass made contact with the ground.
- Fortunately, the motor AND the tiller had already been taken off.
- Fortunately, the marina had a massive floor jack that they wheeled out so we could lift the back end of the boat up.
- Fortunately, other people were around that helped to push down on the tongue of the trailer so we could get it attached back to the hitch to drive it back to the boat ramp.
- Fortunately, the marina also had another trailer nearby with a winch handle we could borrow so that we could properly load the boat onto the trailer this time.
This is a MASSIVE list of "fortunatelys" that you DON'T want to have to hope for, so I'll reiterate the lesson I wanted to share with everyone: if you don't have a working winch, you don't have a working trailer. And, you absolutely need to get these boats up on the trailer before you take them out of the water.
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