Gludy
Well-Known Member
What is your most embarrassing incident?
Mine is one I reported on a few years back on this forum …..
I have been boating about 4 years now and during that time had a few embarrassing incidents. If I had to pin down just one it would be my first Mayday rescue.
I was out on Drumbeat with a number of guests and belting along back to the harbour when a friend shouted that there was smoke coming from the bow of a yacht on the starboard bow side – we were some distance away.
Taking a look we all saw that there were a fair number of people gathered on the bow of the medium sized yacht ( raggie) boat and one was waving his arms in the Mayday fashion – up together and down along his side – smoke was clearly coming up from the bow …. It was fairly obvious they had no radio and were on fire – it would take me no time at all at almost 30 knots to reach them and so I turned to starboard to go to the rescue shouting instructions to the crew as to what we were going to do ….. exciting stuff really.
As we approached the crowd on the bow of the raggie stood there in open eyed amazement – it was obvious they way they were dressed that they were not all boating people and were clearly in wide eyed shock …. Understandable because even the most experienced boating people should be scared of fire at sea!
It was then and only then when we could see the whites of their eyes that my friend shouted in a high voice to turn away and abandon the rescue … I turned the boat away at high speed and my friend then explained to me it was a funeral party spreading the ashes of someone. The arm waving was the symbolic way of spreading the ashes and the smoke – that blue – grey smoke was the ashes – we probably managed to scoop up a fair amount of those ashes and cycle them through my gin palaces engines ……. I am afraid they had to hold onto the rails and each other as our wash hit them but apart from that it seems no harm was done ….. I had a drink in the club when I got back after that one!
Mine is one I reported on a few years back on this forum …..
I have been boating about 4 years now and during that time had a few embarrassing incidents. If I had to pin down just one it would be my first Mayday rescue.
I was out on Drumbeat with a number of guests and belting along back to the harbour when a friend shouted that there was smoke coming from the bow of a yacht on the starboard bow side – we were some distance away.
Taking a look we all saw that there were a fair number of people gathered on the bow of the medium sized yacht ( raggie) boat and one was waving his arms in the Mayday fashion – up together and down along his side – smoke was clearly coming up from the bow …. It was fairly obvious they had no radio and were on fire – it would take me no time at all at almost 30 knots to reach them and so I turned to starboard to go to the rescue shouting instructions to the crew as to what we were going to do ….. exciting stuff really.
As we approached the crowd on the bow of the raggie stood there in open eyed amazement – it was obvious they way they were dressed that they were not all boating people and were clearly in wide eyed shock …. Understandable because even the most experienced boating people should be scared of fire at sea!
It was then and only then when we could see the whites of their eyes that my friend shouted in a high voice to turn away and abandon the rescue … I turned the boat away at high speed and my friend then explained to me it was a funeral party spreading the ashes of someone. The arm waving was the symbolic way of spreading the ashes and the smoke – that blue – grey smoke was the ashes – we probably managed to scoop up a fair amount of those ashes and cycle them through my gin palaces engines ……. I am afraid they had to hold onto the rails and each other as our wash hit them but apart from that it seems no harm was done ….. I had a drink in the club when I got back after that one!