Hi all - I dug around a bit looking for other conversations about keel damage from rocks and couldn't find something close to my situation, so posting it. This is also my second season owning my own boat, so I'm "learning" a lot!
A friend has a new dock off his house. I have a 35ft sailboat 6.5 draft. We did all the math to determine that yes, I could tie up and stay tied up even during a median low tide. Well...even though I take full responsibility my friend failed to remember that he was advised to not have someone tie up on the left side of the dock because there is a rock at the bottom (otherwise it's sandy/gravely). That's where we tied up. The rock side - of course.
The boat was left unattended for two low-tide cycles and the bottom of my lead keel was bouncing up and down off this rock and maybe even resting on it during the low point of low tide. I mask and snorkeled on it today just after the second low when it was realized it was hitting. The very bottom of the keel is missing all bottom paint and barrier coat paint and is all smooshed and smashed, like working clay with your fingers. I didn't notice any cracks or other damage further up the keel. Really does appear to have just been up and down banging while tied up, no forward or reverse velocity while hitting the rock.
I promptly moved the boat off the dock and to a mooring in deeper water.
How worried should I be? Safe to sail as is? Should I hire a diver to inspect it? Haul and fix now or sail on for the season and do the work when the season is done? Safe to keep in the water with barrier coat paint missing?
I'm planning on jumping in again tomorrow for another inspection. Let me know if there are other things I should be looking for in my own inspection.
A friend has a new dock off his house. I have a 35ft sailboat 6.5 draft. We did all the math to determine that yes, I could tie up and stay tied up even during a median low tide. Well...even though I take full responsibility my friend failed to remember that he was advised to not have someone tie up on the left side of the dock because there is a rock at the bottom (otherwise it's sandy/gravely). That's where we tied up. The rock side - of course.
The boat was left unattended for two low-tide cycles and the bottom of my lead keel was bouncing up and down off this rock and maybe even resting on it during the low point of low tide. I mask and snorkeled on it today just after the second low when it was realized it was hitting. The very bottom of the keel is missing all bottom paint and barrier coat paint and is all smooshed and smashed, like working clay with your fingers. I didn't notice any cracks or other damage further up the keel. Really does appear to have just been up and down banging while tied up, no forward or reverse velocity while hitting the rock.
I promptly moved the boat off the dock and to a mooring in deeper water.
How worried should I be? Safe to sail as is? Should I hire a diver to inspect it? Haul and fix now or sail on for the season and do the work when the season is done? Safe to keep in the water with barrier coat paint missing?
I'm planning on jumping in again tomorrow for another inspection. Let me know if there are other things I should be looking for in my own inspection.