Lake Hopatcong has overhead power lines to 2 separate islands. I don't think the heights are marked. I motored towards the power line that jumps to Halsey Island and decided that I wasn't going to take a chance. It does seem odd that there isn't a greater warning. It seems like local knowledge and general apprehension keeps sailboats away (in the case at Lake Hopatcong). I'd have to say the location of the power lines isn't a logical place to take a sailboat due to the relatively narrow passage and protection from the wind. Smaller sailboats would have no problem crossing under, but I don't know what the threshold would be. I'm guessing that none of the LHYC fleets cross under these power lines.Who has low hanging power lines over a recreational lake? There is a piece of information missing here.
VERY common on reservoirs, in particular next to bridges. Often the lines are just above the water clearance height.There is more to this story I'd like to understand.
1) was the boat in the water? If so, how did it hit a power line? Who has low hanging power lines over a recreational lake? There is a piece of information missing here.
It appears from the map that the power lines cross a narrow neck that connects a larger area on the north side of the power lines in Alley Creek with the smaller area north of the bridge. I assume that it also isn't feasible to take a sailboat from the main body of the lake up into Alley Creek because of the bridge, so it isn't that likely to find sailboats in Alley Creek. Are you saying that the wind shift, caused difficulties for the boys because they launched on the south side of the power lines and the shift caused them to drift into the power lines? Lacking sufficient experience, they may not have been able to sail upwind to avoid the power lines, so they attempted to paddle, instead? Boxed in by the bridge and the power lines, it seems like a place where sailboats really don't belong (there appears to be only about 50 acres of water surface in that confined space.The scouts were camping on private property on the creek side (north) of the bridge. They were only paddling to try to keep the boat out of the lines. I have NOT been in that area personally and have no idea of conditions there. True that the older scouts were giving a younger scout a training lesson. The older scouts were camping on the south side of the bridge and had the Hobie out on the main lake the weekend prior so, they had some familiarity with the boat. This lake has VERY shifty winds and there was a front heading in on Saturday (one of the reasons I didn't go out) causing a wind shift from the north to the south. The area is narrow and the lines are the lowest over the deepest section. The power company is well aware of the condition of that line as it has killed a sailor form our club in years past. (though I am not sure if it is the same location as the lines run next to the road where there are bridges that cross the feeding creeks) He was an attorney and his widow has the $ to prove it. They supposedly raised the lines after that incident.
I would have to guess that inexperience was the major factor at this point.
As I have not been in that area personally, though this is what I assume to be true. I don't know where the property they were staying on is located. Even if they were staying to the north of the lines, as I said earlier, the wind on this lake shifts constantly. It's a true test of skills to manage it. I've been sailing off and on since I was 12 and this lake is one of the most challenging lakes I've been on.It appears from the map that the power lines cross a narrow neck that connects a larger area on the north side of the power lines in Alley Creek with the smaller area north of the bridge. I assume that it also isn't feasible to take a sailboat from the main body of the lake up into Alley Creek because of the bridge, so it isn't that likely to find sailboats in Alley Creek. Are you saying that the wind shift, caused difficulties for the boys because they launched on the south side of the power lines and the shift caused them to drift into the power lines? Lacking sufficient experience, they may not have been able to sail upwind to avoid the power lines, so they attempted to paddle, instead? Boxed in by the bridge and the power lines, it seems like a place where sailboats really don't belong (there appears to be only about 50 acres of water surface in that confined space.
This was my assessment as well. I have told everyone who has asked me about it, I would not have let the boat in that area to begin with, however, the boat is secondary to any one person.They may be Eagle Scouts but they are still kids with a predictable inability to process all the risks. A knowledgeable adult boat master could have pre-declared the creek as a no-go zone and that would have triggered a response to abandon efforts to save the boat and instead swivel to safety. That kind of training process allows these young men to manage their safety. Senior Scouts would ID No-Go limits met, abandon and recover everyone Now. Clearly no one in this situation realized the risk and rewards. Screw the boat.