Perhaps I'm being too cynical but at some point the CG should have been involved. That would have documented the complete lack of maintenance and the lack of a good Samaritan to even be effect without great effort.
If we had waited for the USCG to get there, the boat would have been on the bottom and there would have been a diesel sheen over the entire harbor. Some of us prefer to sit back and rubber-neck the
train wreck others prefer to help out. I guess I am in the latter group, as were about ten others on Saturday night.
Call the USCG? That's a a great idea but it really means
just let her sink....

I purposely DID NOT hail on 16 because we did not have the time to deal with 15 minutes of
inane questions rather than a rapid response.
What is your position?
How many people on board?
What is the nature of the distress?
Do you have an anchor?
What color is your dog?
Is everyone wearing a life jacket?
How old is your mothers, mother?
Do you have working bilge pumps?
Do you have a cell phone?
etc. etc..
Sorry, I did not have time for that BS so CH 9 worked almost instantly and bilge pump handles were on the way in seconds, as was help from multiple other boats in the anchorage........
Here in Maine Sea Tow or Tow Boat US get to the scene about 200% faster than the USCG does, and this time Tow Boat US did not show up until we had the water to cabin sole level. If we had sat back, called Tow Boat US, and
rubber-necked the vent the boat would have sunk and we'd all be smelling diesel sheen all night. I will choose to prevent a
fuel spill/Superfund Site/hazard to navigation any time I can.
The last event I witnessed a
USCG FAIL on was a BOAT FIRE and it took the USCG 2 1/2 hours to get on-scene only to find floating & drifting rubble when they got there. Occupants were rescued by good Samaritans despite the USCG being notified/hailed immediately. Heck Sea Tow came from nearly twice the distance and was on scene in 40 minutes. It took the USCG 2 1/2 hours to get on scene.
Up here in the boonies calling the USCG for an incident like this is about as useless as boobs on a bull.
For those suggesting this was
intentional, I disagree 150%. The guy is just a clueless
Mr. Magoo wandering around aimlessly and
usually getting lucky... This time Mr. Magoo's luck just failed.
Last night, at racing, I actually spoke to the crew member that backed over the lobster pot, and a mooring BTW. He had ZERO CLUE the vessel had no operable bilge pumps. He went so far as to tell me they had "
just been replaced over the winter".... He also had ZERO clue the boat was taking on water when he left.
I asked him point-blank how or why he would ever race on a boat like that and he just shrugged because he had no clue she was in such disrepair. I suspect
Mr. Magoo would shrug the same way.
I also received a photo of the pot wrap, on the boats Max Prop, with the boat now on the hard. it was sent to me from "Ricky" who happened to be at that yard yesterday. It looks like as Osprey built a nest on the prop..... D'oh...
Some people are just patently UNSAFE, CLUELESS and a MENACE to themselves and others and they
don't even know it...

I firmly believe this is the case here as there is a lot more to the story I can't & won't divulge that I base this conclusion on.
I am doing everything in my power to see to it that guys like this can't impact our club, in a liability manner, when folks are injured or die as a result of poor seamanship.
P.S. How many of you that have now read this have checked your manual & automatic bilge pumps?
How about your strum screens...?
Inspected the shaft log and packing gland hose clamps?
How about seacock hoses and clamps?