That is heartbreaking. Looks like it is reparable but take a bit.
It may be me but I am much more comfortable on my own gear that I am familiar with and are able to inspect regularly. I have seen too many cases where the boat floats away the mooring ball still attached
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I thought the video was going well till he tried to compare a "live hollywood director" not being able to fail and what happened with the boat. If he truly believed what he said about his "can't fail" role....I would refer him to my above paragraph. The old adage of "well others just like me do it all the time" and that satisfies his "not able to make a mistake rule"...that's when I stopped watching.
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But, based upon what he's said, I am a lot less critical of him than most here, I think. Other decisions would have avoided the event, but that can be said about almost any adverse event. 20-20 hindsight.
1. Mooring ball of unknown quality/suitability
2. Lee shore
3. Vessel left unattended
4. Swimming to shore
5. An activity that was not critical
Even if the vessel was not grounded, how risky is it for middle aged men to swim back against the weather after spending time drinking/eating in a restaurant?
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Depends upon the men, the water, and how much drinking and eating, right? Reasonably fit men after a modest meal and with minimal alcohol in their system might be fine. Unconditional, sedentary, folks with limiting health conditions who over ate and are plastered. Well, not so much. In this case at least some of them did seem to swim out there okay.
It seems like the big question here, ubder the hypothetical fact picture we are discussing, is whether the restaurant should have been trustable w.r.t. the risks attendant with a leeward shore and the type of vessel in question.
I don't want to disagree that there are risks for anchoring or mooring with a leeward shore and that these risks are amplified by the character of the vessel and the unattended nature of the vessel.
But, there are sizeable attendant risks to defying gravity by 30,000 feet, yet I do that all the time without a thought, as most do, because I trust the engineering, manufacturing, and the operators (insert Boeing and 737 Max comments here).
I guess I just wonder was this an unlikely bad ball, or is the failure of a commerical mooring ball commonly understood to be a higher risk than I've estimated.
How long before his GoFundMe page is up and running?
I have also left my boat unattended in a restaurant mooring ball for lunch but certainly would not do it with these swells on a lee shore.
They swam ashore because the swells were too large to use the dinghy
(Screen shot from video during salvage operation which, I believe, was the same day.)
I have also left my boat unattended in a restaurant mooring ball for lunch but certainly would not do it with these swells on a lee shore.
They swam ashore because the swells were too large to use the dinghy
(Screen shot from video during salvage operation which, I believe, was the same day.)
All shores become super shallow at some point...but that's not THE point.
To have big breakers anyplace, you have to have big swells. They just don't look big in deep water but they are still powerful and will drive things ashore unless there is a strong breeze coming from the shore which will blow a boat away from shore but would stack up the swells too.
So the real question isn't all the drivel of how big the surf/swells, or should you swim in or dinghy in...it's whether the conditions (combination of wind, swells, current) plus a mooring or anchor issue that will drive the boat ashore or seaward and how fast. That allows one to determine whether an unattended boat is prudent seamanship or not.
I thought it interesting the hollywood director didn’t film the most important detail-the point of failure. He filmed the mooring ball on the beach, which he stated was still attached, but didn’t film where the failure point was (or I missed it). That seems telling to me. With to short a scope, he could have been yanking the mooring ball clear out of the water in those large swells.
I thought it interesting the hollywood director didn’t film the most important detail-the point of failure. He filmed the mooring ball on the beach, which he stated was still attached, but didn’t film where the failure point was (or I missed it). That seems telling to me. With to short a scope, he could have been yanking the mooring ball clear out of the water in those large swells.