Memorial Day Weekend Mishap
Plans were to leave work early, get in the boat, and go about 3 to 4 hours to get to a marina near where the rest of my family was spending Memorial Day 2004 Weekend. As in many "disasters", many things had to go wrong to cause this failure: 1) Left work later than planned, burning precious daylight 2) Forgot backup flashlight 3) Brand new fresh out of the box searchlight not tested and found during journey to not work. 4) My compass was not lighted. Our trip was in the wide open well charted waters of Tampa Bay, but then we had to turn south and enter Intercoastal. I discovered there were many different channels in this area all with flashing markers, and I think I got the correct one. However, the channel went a certain distance then bore off in another direction. Plus, the water on each side of the channel was about 2 feet or less. I didn't get very far into the channel when I felt the boat come to a sudden stop and heard the sickening sound of splintering fiberglass. I tried to motor off, but we were stuck tight. I was not happy about being stuck near a channel at night, as I was concerned about some low draft powerboat flying along at night plowing into me. I tried to put the shark warnings out of my mind ("Avoid swimming at night") as I jumped off the boat to see if I could figure out what to do. I felt my fiberglass centerboard and found it had been crunched and deformed from the grounding. It was bent and broken and could not be pulled up the centerboard slot. I held my breath, got under the boat, lifted it up a bit to get the centerboard aligned with the slot, and was able to pull the centerboard up through the slot and get us free. I called my wife and let her know we were not going to make it that night, got an extensive lecture about what an idiot I was and how unsafe I was (I hate it when she's right!), and decided to get back to our home port. We had a nice following wind and a pretty full moon, so going back home was not too bad until about 3:00 am or so when the moon set. I couldn't see my compass, and my home port was behind a bend in the shoreline. I hugged the shoreline until my depthmeter(the only lighted instrument on the boat!) told me I was too close, then I steered away.Finally, about 4:30 or so in the morning, I saw the faint light of my home port channel marker. It was so dark at that time that I still had to sweat running into the unlit channel markers on my way in, but I finally made it to my slip about 5:30 am. I slept for a couple of hours, then drove down and slept some more. I came back to check the boat a couple of days later and had about 6 to 9 inches of water. Ran the bilge pump on a semi-daily basis until the weekend when I pulled the boat out and repaired the damage. In the weeks after that , I threw out the compass that came with the boat and get a nice expensive lighted compass - worth every penny. I learned to make sure all my hardware works well before I go off on any journey. I have also moved the boat closer to the area where we often weekend to reduce the potential for long night voyages into unknown waters. I have become obsessive compulsive about flashlights, having bought a 4 pack over the weekend, but other than that, I bear no other permanant ill effects from my stupidity.