First off, I do empathize with what happen. I received a couple battle wounds a few years ago when a skiff wasn’t paying attention to the tides the back corner of his boat starched my sides all up when we were anchored.
I have to agree with Mike. Just because this is the way you have been doing it doesn’t make it right. What would have happen if you had tied the boat to the dock, parked the truck, then hoped in the boat and boom, battery dead, or whatever and the boat doesn’t start. That is a sure way to piss a lot of people off cause I am sure it takes you at least 15 mins to take the boat off and tie it up and then park your truck, now the boat is going to be tied up for another 15 minutes.
Just do like the rest of us; back the truck in, start the motor, float the boat, drive the boat off the trailer and then park the truck. If you have 2 people the driving the boat off the trailer and parking the boat can be done simultaneously.
I am not trying to be cynical, I just hope you think about changing your ways.
Again, I feel your pain.
RotaryRacer wrote:
qweedqwag wrote:
Me myself I dont understand your use of lines to launch the boat anyway, I am confused as to your whole procedure, why didnt you unhook the boat back out 30 40 feet pull the tow veicle away, have them park it, and come back to the dock and pick up your friend, your ay seems like a recipe for disaster and you got it.
Mike
Recipe for disaster my ass. If you don't understand, don't assume I'm an idiot.
This method of launching is pretty typical and is really they way I always launch. The only difference in this case was that the length of the ramp and the length of the dock required that I had to push the boat back out past the end of the dock. This required that I have some slack in the lines. The boat was floating and was clear of the trailer. The bow line just happened to be drooping down just a little bit too low and was totally by coincidence the trailer guide caught it while I pulled out the trailer.
Assume I was launching solo. This friend isn't someone I would want to teach how to pull the truck out in one evening. He has never been around boats and he never pulls trailers. Honestly, trying to communicate the nuances of pulling a truck/trailer out of the water at a boat ramp could have ended with my truck in the water. Or he may have just gunned it and pulled the boat right up on dry land. I woudl have ust the ropes bsically the same way.
Thanks for the empathy.