Georgia on My Mind and Under My Keel

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Nov 22, 2008
3,562
Endeavour 32 Portland, Maine
A friend of mine who had made the ICW trips dozens of times as a delivery skipper said to me, “Roger, if you get all the way to Florida without running aground, I’ll know you are a liar.” Well, I would really like to be a liar so I have risen to the challenge and paid especially close attention to my navigation. I made it through another state without the keel touching it but, damn it, I thought I could get more than .3 miles into Georgia without breaking my streak.
There were extenuating circumstances though. I had just entered the Elba Island Cut off the Savanna River and crossed the border into Georgia when I saw a very large vessel, for this waterway, coming the other way with a Coast Guard escort vessel in front. Normally, I would have done a “U” turn back into the main channel but a catamaran which had been exhibiting some somewhat tentative and uncertain behavior was right behind me and Lee and Lynn close behind him. Trying to get this whole parade turned around in a narrow channel seemed more hazardous than carrying on. Besides, I could clearly get my 4’-3” draft into water that the behemoth coming towards me could never reach.

I moved over out of the channel line, slightly to starboard of the next red marker watching the depth sounder closely. I slowed and got down to eight feet trying to feel my way along the contour of that depth. The Coast Guard boat accelerated ahead however, and clearly established by “hull language” that there was no way I was going to pass between them and their charge. I was aiming for a very close port to port passing with the boys (and girls) in blue when the numbers on the depth sounder suddenly went 8,7,6, the depth alarm went off, 5, 4, and I felt the drag of that feeling I haven’t felt for thousands of miles now.

The boat didn’t stop. I put on power and plowed about a 6 inch deep furrow in the mud of Georgia as I turned back towards the channel. The Coast Guard, seeing the boat hesitate and trim slightly by the head, realized that I had gone the extra mile and more in making room for what turned out to be a Casino Boat, and moved out into the channel enough to let me get back into five and six feet of water.

I was a bit surprised because I was moving away from the end of Elba Island and the water should have been getting deeper but it must have been one of those humps. After all, I had moved out of the channel. I squeezed past the USCG boat and moved back into the edge of the channel where there was plenty of room to pass the Casino boat. Oddly enough, this whole thing took place without any Security or other calls on the radio.

Does this count? Well, I can no longer say that the keel hasn’t touched. However, I would never have been that far over if the Coast Guard (who aren’t seamen, after all) hadn’t moved into a position to block me from following the channel contour. If not for their aggressive maneuver towards me, I would have just hugged the edge of the channel instead of trying to get entirely out of it.

I think I will modify my definition of running around. Keel contact was a pretty high standard which I am proud to have upheld for well over 3000 miles. Henceforth, “Running Aground” will mean having forward progress interrupted and only re-established by the intervention of TowboatUS, SeaTow, laying out anchors, or waiting for a rising tide. My boat never stopped, just slowed slightly. As far as I am concerned, I am still a liar.
 
Nov 15, 2011
29
Chappaquiddick 25 25' catboat Hyannis, MA
As the lifetime Commadore of the Kedgers' Club, I can assure you that a scrape does not count as a grounding unless you either come to a full stop or hit hard enough to bump over with the stern rising at least six inches in the process. But keep trying.
G'luck
 
Dec 9, 2006
694
Oday 22 Hickory, NC
All for a damn casino boat! And to think we are wasting taxpayer dollars escorting it in and out of port! Can you read the disgust for casino boats in my words?Jack
 
Feb 26, 2004
23,047
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
How about some disdain for the CG boat that forced Roger over so far unnecessarily?

Good luck, Roger, keep up the good floating thingie.
 
Nov 22, 2008
3,562
Endeavour 32 Portland, Maine
How about some disdain for the CG boat ...
I think that unfair. Boys and girls from the midwest feel the lure of the sea as much as anyone (I'm from Ohio and every USCG boarding officer I ever spoke to had a midwest accent). If they chose to follow it in a way that lets them serve and protect, they deserve our respect.

It wasn't the boat coxwain's fault that he was put out there on a fools errand at maybe age 23 with a six week small boat handling course behind him and inserted into a navigational situation that was challenging even to someone with half a century of cruising experience. He, or she, was on the ball enough to see that my boat was dragging and moved in time that I didn't lose my momentum and get stuck.
 
Nov 6, 2006
10,093
Hunter 34 Mandeville Louisiana
You're good, Roger ! I figure the keel thing is like driving in deep mud.. If ya get through, you are fine.. If ya bog the boat down to a standstill.. that is different ! The slidy mud/clay is a lot more forgiving than the hard granite things ya have in Maine !
 
Jan 22, 2008
8,050
Beneteau 323 Annapolis MD
Roger, with an extra brace of brandy in my morning coffee, I had a chat with Neptune this morning. He was playing golf and likened your experience to hitting the ball into a sand trap, but the ball bouncing back out and on it's way- thus you were not "in the trap". Same applies to you if you did not come to a stop, and continued on your way.

Also pondered was if your experience was like a "Mulligan", which allows us observers to look the other way and consider you are still a virgin. :D
 
Apr 22, 2001
497
Hunter 420 Norfolk, VA
Rodger, I'd like to clarify your ICW event ...

Your incident would only be termed a "bump" ... as in 'an endeavor, while the vessel is underway, to briefly review the composition of the bottom for research purposes'.

A "grounding" would be an incident wherein your vessel and the bottom join together intimately for the purpose of the actual acquisition a 'soil sample' by the vessel.

Bumping doesn't count, you're still 'good'.
 
May 24, 2004
7,174
CC 30 South Florida
Your record is intact. Here it does not count unless you have to call for a tow boat or spend more than an hour being unable to move.
 

rbgarr

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Sep 10, 2011
15
Shields 30 Boothbay Harbor
Pluff mud

is a mere warning system and sliding through it don't count as grounding. After living in GA along the ICW for twenty years you'll find it pretty often outside the marked channels in the creeks. The problem comes when you hit it hard enough to slice down through it and jam into the beds below. If the boat is small enough that you try to get out to shove off, then the razor sharp oyster shells are the worst of it.
 
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