I agree
How many of us went to sleep last night thinking of the many ways to stop the leak. My first thought was to find the leak. Then or before, if there was time, shut the water intake valve for the motor, disconnect the line, then dump the line in the water and start the motor. Then I thought maybe I should replace the intake line with a longer one so it would reach the bottom of the bilge, or close to it. If I coil the line up, would it make a difference in how much water it will suck up? Then I went through every spot on my hull, mentally, from the point of view of the inside of the hull. Could I find the hole, and do something about it from inside or out. Seat chusions with straps at two ends. They float. So tie a line to each end strap. Add some weights to drop the line below the hull and try to position the line over the hole. Or you could use what the previous person mentioned using the sun shade. But now I REALLY have a good reason to add more grommets to it.And I carry two wax rings for a home toilet. It stick to anything, wet or dry, and I think I could smash it on to the hull and somehow it would stay (fat chance of that, the water pressure would likely blow it through the hull.)Whay else is there? ANYTHING. You use what ever you have. from a blanket to a hat to the cover from the stove.And that led me to think - why don't I compartmentalize the hull? Shouldn't the bow area be isolated from the rest of the hull? The most likely place to get a hole would be in the bow area, and maybe a few feet back. Exactly where my interior wall is for the front cabin. Only below the floor, it is wide open. Now I am gong to look at it and see how hard it would be to seal that area up (I have no water of fuel tank at present so it should be easy-er.) Then all I have to do is put in a cleanout hole with a cover and I have a wall. What else do you do/ Check your position and mark it on a chart every half hour. Then in case of a holing, you have the coordinates. And did anyone ever give the CG their coordiantes on VHF? My experiences (100% of the time) show that you leave off the seconds. It appears to be too many numbers for the person on the other end of the radio to grasp. Well anyway I thought about it, and think about it and swtories like this are the reason why.Lastly, i was on lake Erie last year when a boat was sinking in the direction we were headed. It took us a while to find them as they were close to shore (they didn't say that on the may-day), had only an orange flag out (about the size of a postage stamp...or so it seemed from a mile away ). Their position was identifyable but a female was giving directions. Not that they aren;t smart, but...they were at the base of the tallest, most well know apartment building in Cleveland. Duh...why not say "We area at the base of the Winton Place?" Instead she said they were about 4 miles West of Cleveland (it was more like 8) and that was it! West of Cleveland where? 10 miles out? 20 miles out? WHat a crew. And yes they were saved, the CG showed up with a pump and they got to the marina and were lifted out. It was a hole in the intake hose. I know, they couldn't find THAT? It was a 28" cabin cruiser and they couldn't get to the intake valve, but they could see it.