J
John Dasenbrock
Those of you who pull your boats each fall and are overanxious to put in early in the spring will understand. I have a 1979 Catalina 25 #1513 that my wife says should be named "The Other Woman" instead of "Home Office". My story. The water hoses had never been changed and were, you know, kind of sticky on the outside and the water on board was turning pretty fast, so I decided to replace them over the winter. I pulled them all. Spring came and I was anxious to get into the water. Everything went without a hitch. I put in on a Saturday the 11th of March, took the trailer back to the yard, and motored to my slip. I spent a lot of time going forward to check the new hole I had drilled for a new knot meter I had installed, but didn't really think about anything else. I had made a list of all the things I had to do to get in the water and had decided that I would install my new water hoses after I was slipped. I used all six of my dock lines and tightened things up tighter than I normally do. Kissed my baby good night and went to town. The following Tuesday, I and my wife decided to take the sails out to the boat. As we crossed the bridge, I looked over, as I always do, for my first glimpse of my blue hulled girl. I didn't see her. I thought, well, I don't have the sail cover on so...I made a joke that my boat had sunk. I looked again, and I can't repeat here what I said. I looked again and the top of my mast was not as high as some of the other boats close by. Joan says that she has never seen me walk so fast and talk so strangely as I did as I approached our slip. There she was...the whole 25 feet of her, plus a foot of her mast..UNDER WATER. You can only imagine, but never feel what I felt at that moment. The only thing that saved her was the tight dock lines, she was hanging on them. When they brought her up the next day they told me that when I had closed my valves in the fall, before taking her out, that some debris had gotten in the way and I only partially closed the valve. During the season, I don't normally close my valves, and only close and open them when I pull out or put in. Why have I humiliated myself before the nation and not just my marina? This story had two morales: 1) Close your valves when you leave your boat. 2) Never, never ever pull a hose from a thru hull without replacing it immediately.Condolences are accepted at MiakaY6401@aol.com