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Cruiser's Stories - Volume 5
Welcome to the SaltySailors.com cruiser's story pages. Sit back and enjoy the stories of cruising sailors, traveling through foreign lands and much more. Many cruiser's are sharing their adventures. Since hurricane season is rapidly approaching, we thought we'd share some hurricane stories. These are not your everyday hurricane stories! good Samaritan?by Scott from s/v Rubicon and ScottsSweaters.com
As hurricane Wilma approached a friend of mine said he was evacuating to Tampa, Florida. He asked that I keep an eye on his sailboat and dinghy, in case he couldn’t make it back. I noted where he parked his dinghy and suggested he leave combination locks on everything so he wouldn’t have to mail a key if access became necessary. He said he would. Wilma came and went. His dinghy was full of water, so I jumped in and bailed it out. The sea was still too rough for me to venture out in my little dingy, so I e-mailed him asking for the combination, advising I’d heard his sailboat had washed up on the rocks. He e-mailed me the combination. The next day, I couldn’t get the combination on the dinghy’s lock to work. Eventually, I gave-up, and motored out to his boat using my dinghy, which resulted in a much longer, rough and wet ride. Climbing into the tilted cockpit, I applied the same combination to the lock protecting his sailboat and it popped open. I took several photographs, then returned ashore to e-mail him the pictures. I also wrote that I couldn’t keep checking on his boat unless I had access to his much larger dinghy, and that the combination he’d given me was for the sailboat not the dinghy. He replied that the same combination worked for all the locks, but the dinghy’s lock often sticks and usually needs a good oiling. The next day, I purchased a can of oil and gave the lock a good soaking. Still, it refused to open. I wrote him again, only to have him reply that the lock sometimes needed manual encouragement. I dialed in the combination and beat upon the lock, and still, it refused to open. Noting that it was locked to a metal loop bolted to the dinghy, I returned with a wrench and unbolted the loop, leaving, loop, lock and cable attached to the dock as I motored away to check on his boat. I made a mental note to suggest that in the future he run the lock to the motor, not secure it to something that can so easily be unbolted from the boat. His was a nice dinghy, three times the size of mine, and equipped with a motor five times as powerful. I made it out to his boat easily and quickly. Then I made a trip back to my boat where I loaded-up several empty bottles to fill with drinking water and headed to the dock. How marvelous it was to be zipping across the harbor instead of bobbing atop every little wave and fighting the current. I said to myself, this is an entirely different style of dinghying, and one that I ought to investigate for myself. As I approached the dock, a man I’d never seen before waved me over and asked if he could ask a question. “Sure,” I said, thinking he, like many other boat owners was looking for a ride out to check on his boat following the storm. “Who told you, you could take that dinghy?” he said. “Shane did,” I replied. “Well, that’s my dinghy and I don’t know any Shane.” Oops. Suddenly I realized why the combination hadn’t worked, despite Shane’s claims that he’d given me the correct combination. Visions of mug shots, poor food and smelly roommates danced about my mind. I thought about how I was going to explain this, and shuddered, thinking were I in his shoes I’d never believe such a story. One minute I was feeling like a Good Samaritan helping a friend, the next minute I felt like I had one foot in jail. He was a bit angry, but seemed to understand there’d been a misunderstanding. I told him I’d stand right here if he wanted to call the police, but that I’d tell them the same story. He was kind of amazed I’d so easily been able to unhook his lock from the dinghy, and seemed to figure who would make up such a story. That, plus, I clearly wasn’t trying to hide or run from anyone and was so casually motoring around the harbor and up to the dock that were I truly a thief, I clearly wasn’t a very good one and would likely have been locked away some time ago. However, his wife wasn’t so understanding. She got a tad loud, proclaiming, “What you’re saying is that you stole our boat.” “Well, in retrospect, I guess you’re right,” I replied. “Only at the time, I didn’t know that’s what I was doing.” The man looked like he’d been through many an argument with her and didn’t wish to delve into another one that wasn’t of his choosing. Happy that he’d reclaimed his dinghy, he chose to end the encounter. I was glad to be free not only of the encounter but his wife as well, thinking given the choice, I’d choose jail rather a life with her. Back to the dinghy dock, I went from boat to boat trying Shane’s combination on each secured with a combination lock. Bingo! There it was, an inflatable dinghy of the same style, color and type of engine as the one I’d ‘stolen,’ only this time the combination worked.
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the seatby Scott from s/v Rubicon and ScottsSweaters.comDuring one of last year’s five hurricanes to impact the Florida Keys, I returned to my dinghy to discover its seat missing. While tied to the dock, the dinghy had undergone quite a tossing. The seat is an inflatable tubular section made of the same Neoprene material the dinghy is made of, and is held in place by its Velcro covered ends. When not attached to the dinghy the seat looks a bit like an oversized Vienna sausage…you know the ones that come in those little cans…however, the seat works fine. My search of the dock area failed to locate the missing seat, so I ordered another. This week, I was ashore on the nearby-undeveloped island known as Christmas Tree Island marveling at the vast array of debris littering the island in the wake of Hurricane Wilma. I spied something of a faded red color deep within the brush and went to investigate. There, a year and SIX hurricanes later, I found the missing seat from my dinghy. What are the chances of that happening?
Hurricane Dennis, Key West 2005
Heart of Gold's bimini after Dennis. Lesson Learned: Always prepare the boat for a hurricane during hurricane season when you go on a trip (even if it's early June and they NEVER hit here). Please support our advertisers.
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