snowleopard
Well-Known Member
We've all heard about them in the press. Have you ever met one?
We met one in Peterhead in 2000. We heard the lifeboat maroon as we were sitting in the marina and saw the lifeboat come in a few hours later towing a 25 footer in pretty poor shape. We invited the owner on board and he told us his story.
He had bought the boat in October and,despite no knowledge of sailing decided to head for the Med via Gibraltar. The first day out it had been rough, in fact we had come in to shelter from the same conditions in our 40 footer. He had been chest-deep in water in his cockpit at times but carried on. Eventually he decided to call it a day and ran the boat up on a beach. In the process he lost his rudder but when he re-floated on the next tide he decided he could carry on by steering with his outboard. After a while the outboard fell off so he called for a lifeboat. He seemed to regard it in much the same way as one might call the AA. The final straw was that he couldn't even read his position off the GPS correctly and the worng lifeboat was sent out. They eventually found him off Aberdeen.
Despite his experiences he was still fully confident in his ability to head off across Biscay in late autumn. He seemed to be like most of the others we hear about - not only did he not know anything about navigation or seamanship but he seemed totally unaware there was anything he needed to know. Of course he had total confidence in his own abilities.
Ever met anyone like that?
We met one in Peterhead in 2000. We heard the lifeboat maroon as we were sitting in the marina and saw the lifeboat come in a few hours later towing a 25 footer in pretty poor shape. We invited the owner on board and he told us his story.
He had bought the boat in October and,despite no knowledge of sailing decided to head for the Med via Gibraltar. The first day out it had been rough, in fact we had come in to shelter from the same conditions in our 40 footer. He had been chest-deep in water in his cockpit at times but carried on. Eventually he decided to call it a day and ran the boat up on a beach. In the process he lost his rudder but when he re-floated on the next tide he decided he could carry on by steering with his outboard. After a while the outboard fell off so he called for a lifeboat. He seemed to regard it in much the same way as one might call the AA. The final straw was that he couldn't even read his position off the GPS correctly and the worng lifeboat was sent out. They eventually found him off Aberdeen.
Despite his experiences he was still fully confident in his ability to head off across Biscay in late autumn. He seemed to be like most of the others we hear about - not only did he not know anything about navigation or seamanship but he seemed totally unaware there was anything he needed to know. Of course he had total confidence in his own abilities.
Ever met anyone like that?