This will definitely cast a pallor on the day, especially if done within view of a large restaurant overlooking the marina. Also be sure to check the nuts and bolts holding the transmission and throttle cables to the engine. Sometimes the nuts will fall off and well, you don't want to have that happening while trying to set an anchor or maneuvering in a tight marina fairway with an audience. Just saying.
So here is a related and funny story. I was delivering a 50' catamaran from Guatemala to Belize for a charter company. The boat was in a Guatemala yard for extensive maintenance (which will be important information later). Luckily, I was not the captain fully responsible for the boat.
We needed to check out, so our plan was to approach a cement wall bow first, the captain would step off to go to immigration and port captain while I moved the boat away and kept station until I had to pick him up.
There is a strong current with us and I'm bringing the boat into the wall trying to keep speed down. As I approach the cement wall bow first and in reverse by this time, speed seems to be increasing and the boat rotating more than expected. I'm thinking the current is taking over, so I give it more juice in reverse, which seems to propel us at frightening speed toward the wall. By the time we hit the wall, I'm at full reverse and the boat is not stopping.
Bang. Tore off a big part of the bow and ended up scraping the side of the boat as we got lines to people on the wall and they were able to stop the boat.
I'm feeling pretty stupid by now, wondering how I messed up so badly since I pilot around a similar sized catamaran every day. My only solace was I wasn't the captain, but I did feel full responsibility.
It turns out that the saildrives were removed for maintenance by the yard and when they reinstalled them, they did not install the cotter pin on the shift cable. The shift cable fell out sometime while we were motoring the boat to the wall, and when I was in full reverse, I was actually in full forward!
Not a broken cable, but the same practical result of a broken cable.
Mark