Beached boat on oak island

Jan 19, 2010
12,370
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
So my family is doing Christmas on oak island and this morning I wake up to see a large mast on the beach. Naturally I had to go see…


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I go talk with the guy. He tells me he lost his main.

The tide was coming in so I ask if he wants me to help him set a kedge. He asks me “what’s a kedge”. I explain. He tells me that had to cut his anchor line because “it was too rough to work on” and he decided it was time to head into shore. He then tells me that “I spent from 4:00Am to 6:00AM pulling her as high as I could on the beach”. “ now I just have to wait for high tide”. This is a 30’ boat with an inboard diesel…

there were too many unanswered questions so I offered him a coffee and the use of our head and walked on. I said if he wanted help pushing off at high tide, let me know.
 
Jun 21, 2004
2,533
Beneteau 343 Slidell, LA
Definitely unusual. What’s the tidal height, at high tide, there? Would guess that The draft on that boat is 4 to 5 ft.
 
Jan 19, 2010
12,370
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
The sails were rotten, The chain plates gapped and covers in silicone…. This was not a well cared for boat. If you are going to steal a boat…
Why was he sailing at night in a fog? In a boat with no electronics and possibly a motor that did not work.
Why cut your own anchor line?

And what is going to be better once the tide comes in. BTW: high tide is 3:00pm so he will have at best, 2 hours to get to a harbor… if we can get him off the beach…and if the info be shared is correct, he would be running on jib alone.
 
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Likes: Will Gilmore
Jan 19, 2010
12,370
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
Definitely unusual. What’s the tidal height, at high tide, there? Would guess that The draft on that boat is 4 to 5 ft.
Yup. Tide chart shows next high at 4.5’. And the guy spent two hours dragging it up as high as he could:facepalm:
 
Jun 21, 2004
2,533
Beneteau 343 Slidell, LA
Yup. Tide chart shows next high at 4.5’. And the guy spent two hours dragging it up as high as he could:facepalm:
Please keep us posted on the outcome; going to be interesting when the tide comes in. I doubt if this guy is going to be able to refloat the boat without lots of help! From the sound of it, I doubt if he has a Sea Tow membership.
 
Jan 1, 2006
7,074
Slickcraft 26 Sailfish
He would be safer on the beach.
We've had these situations In New Suffolk Harbor due to storms. Once that boat is on the beach for a while and the keel sinks in the sand, the solution is a chain saw, a bobcat and a dumpster.
Some local guys pulled one off the beach and re-moored it. It sank within 24 hours.
 

PaulK

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Dec 1, 2009
1,241
Sabre 402 Southport, CT
No thief is going to spend hours on a beached stolen boat, trying to get it higher up out of the water. Maybe he figured that by going up to the top of the island he'd be able to slide down into the water on the other side. Looks like getting off is going to triple his $500 cost-per-outing. He's going to have to go out sailing a lot more times to get back to where he started on that score.
 
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Likes: LloydB
Oct 19, 2017
7,746
O'Day 19 Littleton, NH
The sails were rotten, The chain plates gapped and covers in silicone…. This was not a well cared for boat. If you are going to steal a boat…
Why was he sailing at night in a fog? In a boat with no electronics and possibly a motor that did not work.
Why cut your own anchor line?
He's not a thief. He lost his anchor and ran aground in the fog because he doesn't know what he's doing and is too embarrassed to admit it. So, he basically is acting like he had a reason to do what he did.
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-Will
 
Jan 19, 2010
12,370
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
So l learned more. His gooseneck failed. At some point he lost all of his anchor chain (?????). And this is me filling in the blanks… after he panicked and the adrenaline wore off he made a series of wrong decisions and decided to head for shore.
High tide was at 1600 today. A large crowd was present. About 8 beefy guys got it turned around and were on a bow line pulling. While the owner sat in the cockpit and wiggled the tiller. At some point, someone with a clew (clue)took the main halyard to port and laid the boat sown on its side. They made some progress before the tide started to work against them. Tow boat US showed up at 3:30 and finished it off
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Jan 11, 2014
11,423
Sabre 362 113 Fair Haven, NY
At some point he lost all of his anchor chain (?????).
If you have an all chain rode and if the bitter end is not well secured, it takes less than a minute for 150' of chain to fall from the chain locker to the bottom. Even if the bitter end is secured, once the chain is down trying to get it back up without a good windlass is a challenge, even with a windlass it may not be easy depending on how much pressure is on the chain.

As Capt. Ron once said, "if its going to happen, its going to happen out there." Looks like it did.
 
Jun 21, 2004
2,533
Beneteau 343 Slidell, LA
All's well that ends well!
Guess that the local law enforcement / beach patrol called Sea Tow to get the boat removed.
That's going to be some "sea story" one day after a few drinks for embellishment!