tonytoller
New Member
Talking to an engineer in Southampton the other day he said he was on his way to sort out a boat that had ripped a drive leg off. Apparently the owner had sold the boat and was taking it out for a final run, when he hit an underwater object. The lifeboat was called and he was towed into Lymington with an engine room full of water. A specialist company was engaged to minimise the damage and they were in attendance until 2.00am, lifting the boat, cranking water out of the engines, rinsing the engine compartment with fresh water etc. This little exercise ran up a bill of £3,000. The owner appeared unconcerned as he would be "covered by his insurance". When I questioned the engineer a bit more closely, he said that the boat owner had hit the Varvassi wreck just off the Needles.
My point is this. The wreck in question has been there for over 60 years and is clearly marked on charts. I don't claim to be a perfect navigator, but I do look at my charts and avoid such obstructions. Surely to do anything different is negligent. The final bill for repairing this damaged boat will be vast (the electrics alone will cost thousands) and I don't see why I should contribute to it through higher insurance premiums, when, to my mind, the skipper was to blame for hitting the wreck.
Or am I being a scrooge?
Oh, and by the way, the owner has yet to tell his buyer there is a problem. So if you're waiting to take delivery of a second hand, twin engine 30+ footer, I'd check it rather carefully.
My point is this. The wreck in question has been there for over 60 years and is clearly marked on charts. I don't claim to be a perfect navigator, but I do look at my charts and avoid such obstructions. Surely to do anything different is negligent. The final bill for repairing this damaged boat will be vast (the electrics alone will cost thousands) and I don't see why I should contribute to it through higher insurance premiums, when, to my mind, the skipper was to blame for hitting the wreck.
Or am I being a scrooge?
Oh, and by the way, the owner has yet to tell his buyer there is a problem. So if you're waiting to take delivery of a second hand, twin engine 30+ footer, I'd check it rather carefully.