- Joined
- Mar 28, 2001
- RO Number
- 3970
- Messages
- 1,453
I ran into a situation this past summer that reminded me of several discussions we have had here in the past. Figured it might make for an interesting discussion.
My wife and I were out exploring around Portsmouth Harbor, heading back up the river when we passed another boat drifting. It was a 22 foot bowrider with the engine hatch up in the back and a couple on board. She looked distraught and he had his head in the engine compartment. I pulled alongside and asked if they were okay, he explained that the engine had died along with a strong electrical burning smell, there was no fire but nothing happened when he turned the key.
We were on an outgoing tide and they were drifting back toward the bridge we had just passed under, at the rate the current was running they would have been going out the inlet with nothing to stop them in short time. I recall several conversations we have had in the past about amateur's towing and what a bad idea it was, but there was no way my conscience would let me leave them to drift into an active inlet and possibly onto the surrounding rocks.
I tossed him a spare anchor line I have on board, had him tie it off to his bow hook, then tied it off centered across my two rear cleats with him about 4 boat lengths behind me. Wet a towel I had on board and hung it about halfway along the length of line to weigh down the line just in case it broke. We slowly towed him upstream just far enough to find an empty dock he could tie off to, waited until he was tied off and headed out. He offered payment which I declined and wished him good luck.
So, right idea or bad idea? What else could/should we have done?
My wife and I were out exploring around Portsmouth Harbor, heading back up the river when we passed another boat drifting. It was a 22 foot bowrider with the engine hatch up in the back and a couple on board. She looked distraught and he had his head in the engine compartment. I pulled alongside and asked if they were okay, he explained that the engine had died along with a strong electrical burning smell, there was no fire but nothing happened when he turned the key.
We were on an outgoing tide and they were drifting back toward the bridge we had just passed under, at the rate the current was running they would have been going out the inlet with nothing to stop them in short time. I recall several conversations we have had in the past about amateur's towing and what a bad idea it was, but there was no way my conscience would let me leave them to drift into an active inlet and possibly onto the surrounding rocks.
I tossed him a spare anchor line I have on board, had him tie it off to his bow hook, then tied it off centered across my two rear cleats with him about 4 boat lengths behind me. Wet a towel I had on board and hung it about halfway along the length of line to weigh down the line just in case it broke. We slowly towed him upstream just far enough to find an empty dock he could tie off to, waited until he was tied off and headed out. He offered payment which I declined and wished him good luck.
So, right idea or bad idea? What else could/should we have done?