B
bill walton
As we have discussed many times here,one always needs to look at the interior of a boat upside down to see how it will look in a knock down. Two weeks ago a Shannon 38 ran on a reef near Key West and sank causing serious damage to the reef and totaling the boat. The skipper wrote a narrative and posted it in one of the local papers. Seems he was coming back from Cuba in the Gulf stream on a stormy night and got hit by a wave that tore the dodger off and put a lot of water down the open companionway. The boat was knocked on here side. The batteries were insufficiently tied down and broke loose knocking a hole in the hull. The batteries were loose and crunched into a cranny from which the crew could not remove them. With power gone, the boat was done for even though they had engine power. They had a single VHF which went with the batteries. They had no charts, underwater, and the wind drove them onto the reef. They were rescued by setting off their EPIRP, less than 10miles from KW. Lots of dumb stuff there that we can all learn from. This is a good reason that batteries, all batteries, need to be securely tied down. Ask yourself, whould the tie downs hold if inverted.