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SailboatOwners.com
There's an interesting article in the November issue of Sail magazine called Cape Fear Drama. The author, motoring in his Freedom 30, gets too close to a dredge that is very inappropriately dragging 300 feet of line behind it, fouls his prop on the line, and is dragged backwards for a time before being cut loose by a small tug accompanying the dredge. The dredge and the tugs leave him behind. A nearby sailboat "feigns not to understand" that he needs help. At the suggestion of a towboat operator he deploys (and then has trouble recovering) his anchor waiting for the tow that takes him out of harms way. The interesting part is that while the author was highly concerned about his vulnerability to traffic in a busy section of the ICW and while he states that 15 to 20 knots of wind were blowing, he apparently didn't consider hoisting a sail and sailing his boat out of danger. If we sail long enough, sooner or later we will run into trouble -- unforecasted high winds, mechanical problems, running aground -- problems that may or may not be of our own doing. But what is our responsibility to get out of our own predicaments without assistance? Boaters in general tend to be a helpful lot. Should we depend on them for aid? In some places towing services or the Coast Guard may come to our assistance. But they don't exist everywhere. The Catch 22 of self reliance is that if we don't leave the dock until we know everything we need to know, we'll never learn everything we need to know. Self-reliance vs. interdependence on the water? Share your viewpoint and be sure to vote in the quiz on the bottom of the home page.(Quiz by Gary Wyngarden)