I remember the last time we grounded, we were running up river, river was running about 6 knots and we were making about 1/2 a knot progress, both of us relaxed in the cockpit and I had my foot on the tiller when I noticed we were not making progress. Missy looks over and states, "water is so clear it looks like the sand is 3 feet down.". Well I jump up and crank up on the keel but by now the rudder is stuck. I jump out, she hands me a pliers and I start to pull the rudder pins ( I had them in so the rudder did not pop up unlike how we usually run with them out. ) now the boat has no steerage and a puff of wind she starts off up river with me on a sandbar. Long story, but the Columbia River is no place to be stuck mid river on a sandbar. 30 minutes later we decided we had the best story of 2023, with pictures of me in nothing but shorts and a hat standing in the always cold Columbia.
Been watching y'all for years now and don't remember y'all ever been grounded like that before, truer words well spoken,"even for the best, it's not a matter of if but when" 👍❤️🇺🇸
Ponce Inlet. Disappearing Island. You would be surprised with ALL the boats beached and partying (especially Holidays and weekends). Ohhhh and shark bite capital (Ponce Inlet at New Smyrna Beach).
Hi you guys Beau to fix your solar connection get some heat shrink in various sizes and some di-electric grease for batterie connections ,that should solve your corrosion problems
The day we left on our cruise in 2010, we ran aground four hours out of the marina and it took us two hours to get ungrounded. I just was enjoying the sail so much and so excited we were finally leaving that I wasn't even looking at the chart plotter.
In Georgetown its more the paper mill stink that gets really strong. They have been telling everyone that the steel mill was closing, we have not been there in a couple years so not sure if it ever did close. One good thing about being on a catamaran, when we run aground we don't live in a sideways boat while we wait to float again :-)
Once you started the music, my anxiety level started racing. I'm so glad for the people that helped you. It wasn't so bad after all. Love your videos, be safe.
You guys have such an upbeat approach despite the mini setback! Making lemonade, as they say. We ran aground the very first time we took our boat out just after the closing. It was a bit of a bump into the mud and I nearly flew off the boat!!! But we managed to reverse outta there. Hurt our egos more than the boat. Ain’t sailing fun!!?
Use a dielectric grease inside the connectors to prevent rain and salt air from getting to the connections. On the crimp connectors, it’s good to use some liquid electrical tape and shrink tubing over them to keep moisture out. Also, “woody wax” and a piece of bronze wool will remove the rust from the stainless hardware onboard and also prevents it from forming as quickly. Good luck!
Running aground can be so very stressful. Loss of mobility, uncertainty and damage report is a nightmare. You two kept your cool and the tow service was awesome. Sometimes it doesn't go well with damage to the keel, rudder and prop. Long fin keels are really susceptible to damage from grounding. Happy to see this end well. Mahalo.
what a great and thoughtful gift from your friends that got you the sea tow.....52.2k subscribers love you both and watching you live your lives.....now get to some 80 degree water temp and have some fun and relaxation 😃😎
Yup, been there, done that ... I ran aground on a -1 tide when I just a little out of the channel. It was 20 minutes before low, so I just sat there for about an hour before I floated off.
If you aren’t too hard aground, and/or don’t have someone to pull you free, you can use an anchor abeam of you and your halyard to heel the boat over and free the keel.
Nice video. Wonderful FL, where a 5+ ft. depth is a blessing. Google maps is a must have and bouncing is an every day occurrence. You used your grounding time well.
It matters less what happens in our travels then how we respond. I commend you for how you handled yourself in the midst of this situation and I wish you the best in your ongoing journeys.
Wow. Thanks for sharing this. Our daughter and son-in-law need tugs to 'tip' their boat which is a Taianna and much heavier than your vessel to get over sand bars.. like the one in Rio Dulce. Several tugs.
Good to hear that some SeaTow franchises are good. It can be spotty. Some SeaTow franchises are not so qualified or eager to help. Tow Boat US is very consistent, top quality service. We had both services for a couple of years and it was clear which was best if you are cruising. If you stay in one area and there is a good SeaTow team there, they might be fine. Good to see you guys back afloat! ❤
I believe that was the Paper Mill you were smelling. Regardless, imagine how Georgetown would be if they were able to replace that steel mill into something conducive to that WATERFRONT area..lol. It could be spectacular! Enjoy your channel and story!
we have to say, the tension was insane watching this as we knew you would run aground, just not when! Great episode as always. We've been aground a number of times in the past five years and 35,000nm. Our most memorable was when we inadvertently anchored too close to a sand bar (and the golf course) in San Diego' Glorietta Bay. We woke at low tide to a fisherman in waders leaning on our sugar scoop to chat with us over coffee. One note on the subject of "liars". Insurance, at least ours, requires one to report any and all groundings. We discovered this after we ran up on a coral head in Fiji and had to actually read our policy in full. We suspect that may have something to do with the behavior as the only boats that haven't touched bottom are those that spend all their time tied up to a dock.
Georgetown where the College is, also has Rats! Last time I was in that area of Georgetown, we sw at least one. Where there's one, there's probably more.
Went through that inlet this past fall/winter. I was originally anchored off shore just south of it in benign conditions, when at 2am the conditions became not benign. Big rollers, and wind. It was a testament to the rockna and 170 feet of chain. Waited until daylight with the engine running just in case. I finally brought the anchor up and motored in. That inlet is really narrow, and to make it more interesting there were smaller boats fishing right next to the jetty. Was a weird experience with the bow pointing right at them (and the rocks) while “crabbing” against the wind.
There are several sandbars in our little bay that are only visable at low tide. Ever since the county (?) added "No Wake" signs (which cant be read unless you are close to them) literally ever other day someone is running a ground on the little sand bar islands. From big motor boats, to every size of sailboat. (no wake signs are near channel markers and are confusing the boaters at which direction to travel in which is causing all the run-a-gounds). Some of the sailboats just put up their sails to let the wind blow them off the sandbar (if the wind is blowing the right direction). All the rest call the tow company and most not all of the time the tow company can pull them off. Some have to wait till late at night to be pulled off when the tide is high. Some without the tow company subcription end up days on the sand bar stuck sideways 24/7 until they can finally get off the sandbar. It's not IF you will run a ground. It's when will you run a ground when boating. You guys always stay positive. Yes, your little boat wanted a rest. And, the heavens knew you needed a rest too. Always enjoy the blessed moments in life when you are "forced" to rest. 🌊💙🌊 Enjoy your day where ever you two are. take care. 🌊
Great show I have run aground in the past- it is an early feeling of helplessness with an sense of lost time. The friends at sea are critical. Glad it all turned out well cheers
This reminded me of the time I ran aground on a mud flat in maine. Like you it was a falling tide. At low tide we took advantage of the situation and dug for clams! Had a great dinner and floated off at high tide. No harm done. I've really enjoyed your videos travelling down the east coast. I've done both the icw and offshore trip many times and your videos have brought back some fun memories!
Next time use the haliard to so the boat can be canted to one is. This will lift the keel and you can moter out. We have done this many times using our dingy.
We only draw 2'3" and still manage to run aground regularly! The fact is, whatever you draw you'll ground sooner or later. Just try to plan to do it on a RISING tide!
Eeeek, stressful for sure! That whole area is constantly changing. We had a catamaran try to enter the ICW just north of that bar, earlier in the year while we were exiting. We were bouncing along the ground and the cat was heading right at us, trying to get us to turn deeper into the sand bar. We didn't alter course until the last second, and of course a few words were exchanged. It would be nice if everyone else on the water was a bit more considerate, no?
Happened for me with my 22 foot Mimmi. Actually I wanted to cross under the Malmo-Copenhagen bridge agaiat the wind. Everything I did, wind under bridge piers didn't let me thru. Until my main sail dropped and afterwards I was in the mercy of wind blowing me towards Saltholm lowlands. It took guys with two 200HP motors to get me out of there. I ever wondered how deep of this lowlands I actually was until getting stuck in sands.
Great episode. I grounded 5 times in one trip through the ICW in the Gulf. I was surprised that the Cat in your opening shot is currently anchored about 300 feet away from me in Marsh Harbor.
Whew, I was worried at the beginning that it was something truly disastrous. I'm so happy you were gifted sea tow though!! Hope you got some much needed rest and snuggle time 🤗💞
With a bracket bolted to each side, you could just put down an outrigger from each bracket with a foot on them to keep them from sinking into the sand/mud, and go dry nice and level. Much more comfortable sitting there level, and just wait for the tide to come back in. No reason to pay for a tow. Just drop a pick with your dingy, or walk it out if the tide is gonna drop far enough, than pull yourself to the anchor when you float, and off you go. You can even have a good snooze, knowing no one is going to drift into you, till you hear the water lapping at the hull.
We anchored just west of where you snagged on a very windy night. Alas, the holding was poor even with our Mantus M1, and we struggled to re-anchor between 3am and dawn. We said to heck with it as the sun came up, and proceeded south, going north 'round the shoal of course. BTW, one of the bridge keepers just south of there was the grouchiest jerk we've ever encountered on the ICW. Just sayin'...
Weicome to Volusia County''s infamous Disappearing Island! I was taking a student sailor out for lesson #2. I found the exact same spot. Played it cool like I did it on purpose to show him how to get off. [MUCH CALMER THAT DAY] The sail trick worked! Glad the boat didn't suffer any damage.
Go sail in moreton bay near Brisbane Australia I was with VMR for many years and I,m on first name basis with every Sandbar having pulled someone of every one of them . It’s not if you run aground ,but when . Sand is forgiving just stay away from rocks . 2 guys we rescued from a fero yacht. They emptied a freezer full of frozen meat to lighten the boat . That brought around a large school of sharks . So we had to take them off. A week later we took them back to recover their rigging the hull was reduced to rubble by wave😂in 3 months no trace of the hull had never been there.
Other thing you can do is seek deeper water with your anchor tide rises use your windlass our crank of a winch reset anchor to deeper water re do process kedging keep moving with tide until boat is free
I've been aground once and it was at the north end of Mosquito Lagoon. I woke up at 4 AM and went on deck to secure a noisy halyard and went back down to close my eyes for a minute. Woke back up a little after 5 and immediately knew the boat wasn't rocking. I missed my tide window by 15 minutes and was then stuck for like 5.5-6 hours. Made it to St Augustine around 11 that night instead of dinnertime.
I've ran the ground a couple times and I found if I take a zodiac style dinghy with a decent motor push from the center of the boat essentially ramming it with your dinghy consistently puts it at that slight angle where the Keel drags across the sand or hopefully not rocks just an idea for next time hopefully it never happens i enjoy watching your videos peace out
Been there, done that 😂😵💫. Not so funny when it was happening, but with the help of a fisherman we got off and sailed on to the nearest harbour 🎉❤. That's the good thing about a full keel boat ⛵😍, no damage at all ❤
Looks more like a Gulf of Mexico deal!! Did a prop test on a boat here in New Port Richey, 3 miles out, took the outdrive right off the back of the boat!! Grew up in Lake Worth.. why look down! Over here, it's,, ONLY LOOK DOWN!! I feel for ya!!😢😮😮
Nice to see the mill pond is still there to anchor in. When I was there last year they where saying about redoing the area, and not seemingly in sailors favor.Atleast you didn't do what I did at Charleston, I came motoring in against a outbound 6knt current. It took a couple hours from the marker to anchor in the middle shallows but I learned. Also the cut south of Charleston against the current, it's more like surfing in reverse and no room to spin around. Just remember if your thinking about coming thru the Okeechobee canal it's a 50' limit at low tide at the rail bridge on the east side of the lake by the lock. And the fella who use to do tipping isn't there anymore. One thing I stick by, if I'm going to run around id rather do it at low tide, atleast then I know I'll eventually get off. But yep I grounded 6 times on my first trip south on the ICW last year, once because of being half awake and moving into a spot at mid tide that left me sitting similar to you two for a few hours.
Dont forget, if you run aground and start to heel, you may need to shut off the fuel vent line to avoid spilling fuel overboard. And I hope everyone has a shut off valve on their fuel vent lines
omygosh! holes in the boat out at sea that one time now shipwrecked? please stay safe love you guys dearly... yes i have run aground but never in the same spot more than once lol
Enjoyed that one. Lol. Dont think we talked about it but I almost hit that bar also. Currents rip in there and the water surface really doesnt give you clues like most places. Super sketchy inlet. I enjoyed it much more my second time. Deren
There is a blessing to y'all running a ground where y'all did. It was sand. When we did it there was rocks and we suffered a little hull damage. Stay playing in da sun and sand...SV Lost Cajun
I remember the last time we grounded, we were running up river, river was running about 6 knots and we were making about 1/2 a knot progress, both of us relaxed in the cockpit and I had my foot on the tiller when I noticed we were not making progress. Missy looks over and states, "water is so clear it looks like the sand is 3 feet down.". Well I jump up and crank up on the keel but by now the rudder is stuck. I jump out, she hands me a pliers and I start to pull the rudder pins ( I had them in so the rudder did not pop up unlike how we usually run with them out. ) now the boat has no steerage and a puff of wind she starts off up river with me on a sandbar. Long story, but the Columbia River is no place to be stuck mid river on a sandbar. 30 minutes later we decided we had the best story of 2023, with pictures of me in nothing but shorts and a hat standing in the always cold Columbia.
One does not run aground, but rather performs an unscheduled careening.
😹😹😹😸😺
and as a nice bonus, it has the possibility of becoming an unscheduled rapid disassembly real quick.
Been watching y'all for years now and don't remember y'all ever been grounded like that before, truer words well spoken,"even for the best, it's not a matter of if but when" 👍❤️🇺🇸
Ponce Inlet. Disappearing Island. You would be surprised with ALL the boats beached and partying (especially Holidays and weekends). Ohhhh and shark bite capital (Ponce Inlet at New Smyrna Beach).
Back before boating days we would go to these disappearing islands all the time being from Florida, now we look at them a whole new way 😜
The technical term for a sailor that has never run aground is "Liar" .
Hi you guys Beau to fix your solar connection get some heat shrink in various sizes and some di-electric grease for batterie connections ,that should solve your corrosion problems
The day we left on our cruise in 2010, we ran aground four hours out of the marina and it took us two hours to get ungrounded. I just was enjoying the sail so much and so excited we were finally leaving that I wasn't even looking at the chart plotter.
That is one of my fears about sailing. I have not been paying attention and got myself into a situation on a boat with no way to easily stop.
In Georgetown its more the paper mill stink that gets really strong. They have been telling everyone that the steel mill was closing, we have not been there in a couple years so not sure if it ever did close. One good thing about being on a catamaran, when we run aground we don't live in a sideways boat while we wait to float again :-)
Your smiles at the end were the best part of the story! I always appreciate how real you two are with whatever life sends your way. Safe sailing.
Thank you ☺️
Once you started the music, my anxiety level started racing. I'm so glad for the people that helped you. It wasn't so bad after all. Love your videos, be safe.
Even in these trying moments,Brandi, you smile, maybe a bit nervously but still smiling ya are badass lady ❤️
You guys have such an upbeat approach despite the mini setback! Making lemonade, as they say. We ran aground the very first time we took our boat out just after the closing. It was a bit of a bump into the mud and I nearly flew off the boat!!! But we managed to reverse outta there. Hurt our egos more than the boat. Ain’t sailing fun!!?
so much fun. all the things they DON'T tell you about lol.
Use a dielectric grease inside the connectors to prevent rain and salt air from getting to the connections. On the crimp connectors, it’s good to use some liquid electrical tape and shrink tubing over them to keep moisture out.
Also, “woody wax” and a piece of bronze wool will remove the rust from the stainless hardware onboard and also prevents it from forming as quickly. Good luck!
Ponce inlet is my home and I've seen countless boats grounded here! You're not the first and surely not the last.
Should have left a sign, Beau and Brandy were here. 🤣😂
Running aground can be so very stressful. Loss of mobility, uncertainty and damage report is a nightmare. You two kept your cool and the tow service was awesome. Sometimes it doesn't go well with damage to the keel, rudder and prop. Long fin keels are really susceptible to damage from grounding. Happy to see this end well. Mahalo.
Use dye electric grease on all electrical connections. Then use a tube like shrink wrap around it.
Having a tow service at the ready is awesome, with my boat insurance I have Tow BoatUS. Both them and Sea Tow are awesome
what a great and thoughtful gift from your friends that got you the sea tow.....52.2k subscribers love you both and watching you live your lives.....now get to some 80 degree water temp and have some fun and relaxation 😃😎
It's great that you ran aground on sand without big waves! Running aground is scary.
Nice job getting off.
Cheers from Alaska
Yup, been there, done that
... I ran aground on a -1 tide when I just a little out of the channel. It was 20 minutes before low, so I just sat there for about an hour before I floated off.
Ohhh my. So sorry this happened my dears. I just got off a four day OT work week and just got a chance now to see…. Wow ….
If you aren’t too hard aground, and/or don’t have someone to pull you free, you can use an anchor abeam of you and your halyard to heel the boat over and free the keel.
Nice video. Wonderful FL, where a 5+ ft. depth is a blessing. Google maps is a must have and bouncing is an every day occurrence. You used your grounding time well.
Wow. What a predicament. Glad you made it out safely. Thanks for sharing your adventures.
Sorry you need to use the correct connection for marine use . Adhesive shrink sleeve and heat shrink but connectors
That’s what we used 😉
It just goes to show, it can happen to anyone. Glad there was no damage! Safe travels!
Exactly! Florida sandbars are no joke! 😳
Wow and I thought I was having a crappy day! I’m glad it worked out. Never a dull moment!!!!
I was just in that anchorage. I used Aqua Maps to get into it because the sand bar is much more prevalent than on Navionics. 😉
It matters less what happens in our travels then how we respond. I commend you for how you handled yourself in the midst of this situation and I wish you the best in your ongoing journeys.
This is the nicest comment, we appreciate it so very much! Thank you.
Wow. Thanks for sharing this. Our daughter and son-in-law need tugs to 'tip' their boat which is a Taianna and much heavier than your vessel to get over sand bars.. like the one in Rio Dulce. Several tugs.
Sea Tow are awesome. I've had to call them twice, although not for an unscheduled careening, and they have been awesome.
Unscheduled careening 🤣😂 YES!
That is one of the most sketchy inlets on the east coast I've encountered. Glad you made it!!
Good to hear that some SeaTow franchises are good. It can be spotty. Some SeaTow franchises are not so qualified or eager to help. Tow Boat US is very consistent, top quality service. We had both services for a couple of years and it was clear which was best if you are cruising. If you stay in one area and there is a good SeaTow team there, they might be fine. Good to see you guys back afloat! ❤
Wow, I'm so glad you made it out of being stuck! That was scary!
Soldering is still the most bullet proof connection!
I believe that was the Paper Mill you were smelling. Regardless, imagine how Georgetown would be if they were able to replace that steel mill into something conducive to that WATERFRONT area..lol. It could be spectacular! Enjoy your channel and story!
23:40 Hey you can't park there lol. Fortunately Florida just sand hopefully no damage happens to the best of us😊.
Sooooo grateful it was just sand!
Even sand, can still crack keel attachment to the the hull
@@dmitripogosian5084 for sure. luckily we have an encapsulated keel, no attachment.
we have to say, the tension was insane watching this as we knew you would run aground, just not when! Great episode as always. We've been aground a number of times in the past five years and 35,000nm. Our most memorable was when we inadvertently anchored too close to a sand bar (and the golf course) in San Diego' Glorietta Bay. We woke at low tide to a fisherman in waders leaning on our sugar scoop to chat with us over coffee. One note on the subject of "liars". Insurance, at least ours, requires one to report any and all groundings. We discovered this after we ran up on a coral head in Fiji and had to actually read our policy in full. We suspect that may have something to do with the behavior as the only boats that haven't touched bottom are those that spend all their time tied up to a dock.
For the electrical connections, dielectric grease. Thanks for the videos.
Nice to see you floating again, I used Sea Tow last August in Sarasota. They are really good at what they do!
Georgetown where the College is, also has Rats! Last time I was in that area of Georgetown, we sw at least one. Where there's one, there's probably more.
Went through that inlet this past fall/winter. I was originally anchored off shore just south of it in benign conditions, when at 2am the conditions became not benign. Big rollers, and wind. It was a testament to the rockna and 170 feet of chain. Waited until daylight with the engine running just in case. I finally brought the anchor up and motored in. That inlet is really narrow, and to make it more interesting there were smaller boats fishing right next to the jetty. Was a weird experience with the bow pointing right at them (and the rocks) while “crabbing” against the wind.
YIKES!! it was a heart pounding entrance for sure. happy you got through it unscathed!
There are several sandbars in our little bay that are only visable at low tide. Ever since the county (?) added "No Wake" signs (which cant be read unless you are close to them) literally ever other day someone is running a ground on the little sand bar islands. From big motor boats, to every size of sailboat. (no wake signs are near channel markers and are confusing the boaters at which direction to travel in which is causing all the run-a-gounds).
Some of the sailboats just put up their sails to let the wind blow them off the sandbar (if the wind is blowing the right direction). All the rest call the tow company and most not all of the time the tow company can pull them off. Some have to wait till late at night to be pulled off when the tide is high. Some without the tow company subcription end up days on the sand bar stuck sideways 24/7 until they can finally get off the sandbar.
It's not IF you will run a ground. It's when will you run a ground when boating.
You guys always stay positive. Yes, your little boat wanted a rest. And, the heavens knew you needed a rest too. Always enjoy the blessed moments in life when you are "forced" to rest. 🌊💙🌊
Enjoy your day where ever you two are. take care. 🌊
Been there, done it! A bit humbling but it happens. I think you guys handled it very well. Glad it was a “soft” grounding! Take good care guys! ❤
Great show I have run aground in the past- it is an early feeling of helplessness with an sense of lost time. The friends at sea are critical. Glad it all turned out well cheers
I usually like watching your videos, but this one makes me glad I live on land! Looks scary out there. Good luck to you both!
lol. It was a minor hiccup. Just another lesson learned 😁
This reminded me of the time I ran aground on a mud flat in maine. Like you it was a falling tide. At low tide we took advantage of the situation and dug for clams! Had a great dinner and floated off at high tide. No harm done. I've really enjoyed your videos travelling down the east coast. I've done both the icw and offshore trip many times and your videos have brought back some fun memories!
aww thanks so much. love the full keel, definitely lessened the worry factor.
Running aground really sucks and is very stressful. You guys seemed to handle it amazingly well.
Next time use the haliard to so the boat can be canted to one is. This will lift the keel and you can moter out. We have done this many times using our dingy.
We did this, we showed it in the video :)
We only draw 2'3" and still manage to run aground regularly! The fact is, whatever you draw you'll ground sooner or later. Just try to plan to do it on a RISING tide!
Eeeek, stressful for sure! That whole area is constantly changing. We had a catamaran try to enter the ICW just north of that bar, earlier in the year while we were exiting. We were bouncing along the ground and the cat was heading right at us, trying to get us to turn deeper into the sand bar. We didn't alter course until the last second, and of course a few words were exchanged. It would be nice if everyone else on the water was a bit more considerate, no?
So very true.
Happened for me with my 22 foot Mimmi. Actually I wanted to cross under the Malmo-Copenhagen bridge agaiat the wind. Everything I did, wind under bridge piers didn't let me thru. Until my main sail dropped and afterwards I was in the mercy of wind blowing me towards Saltholm lowlands. It took guys with two 200HP motors to get me out of there. I ever wondered how deep of this lowlands I actually was until getting stuck in sands.
Great episode. I grounded 5 times in one trip through the ICW in the Gulf. I was surprised that the Cat in your opening shot is currently anchored about 300 feet away from me in Marsh Harbor.
No way! That’s super cool! Are you heading south?
@@BeauAndBrandy We will be going south in about a week. Met a friend of yours up here, Evan Loewen. Great guy.
Omg what a bad feeling but you guys took that like champs. Glad you’re floating again. Safe travels
Saoirse just wanted a little nap on her side i guess 😆
Whew, I was worried at the beginning that it was something truly disastrous. I'm so happy you were gifted sea tow though!! Hope you got some much needed rest and snuggle time 🤗💞
The Force is strong with these young one's.... Stay safe guy's
Awesome video! We're glad to have been able to help get you guys back to deep water!!
Seriously, what an amazing group you guys are!!
With a bracket bolted to each side, you could just put down an outrigger from each bracket with a foot on them to keep them from sinking into the sand/mud, and go dry nice and level. Much more comfortable sitting there level, and just wait for the tide to come back in. No reason to pay for a tow. Just drop a pick with your dingy, or walk it out if the tide is gonna drop far enough, than pull yourself to the anchor when you float, and off you go. You can even have a good snooze, knowing no one is going to drift into you, till you hear the water lapping at the hull.
We anchored just west of where you snagged on a very windy night. Alas, the holding was poor even with our Mantus M1, and we struggled to re-anchor between 3am and dawn. We said to heck with it as the sun came up, and proceeded south, going north 'round the shoal of course. BTW, one of the bridge keepers just south of there was the grouchiest jerk we've ever encountered on the ICW. Just sayin'...
Weicome to Volusia County''s infamous Disappearing Island! I was taking a student sailor out for lesson #2. I found the exact same spot. Played it cool like I did it on purpose to show him how to get off. [MUCH CALMER THAT DAY] The sail trick worked! Glad the boat didn't suffer any damage.
Florida sandbars have a vendetta against us sailors I think 🤣😂 I like your style!!
... very appreciate your down to earth life... Stay on course!
How refreshing to see a channel actually sailing instead of doing boatwork!!!
Go sail in moreton bay near Brisbane Australia I was with VMR for many years and I,m on first name basis with every Sandbar having pulled someone of every one of them .
It’s not if you run aground ,but when .
Sand is forgiving just stay away from rocks . 2 guys we rescued from a fero yacht. They emptied a freezer full of frozen meat to lighten the boat . That brought around a large school of sharks . So we had to take them off.
A week later we took them back to recover their rigging the hull was reduced to rubble by wave😂in 3 months no trace of the hull had never been there.
yikes. sounds like Australia sandbars are worse than florida. is everything over there out to get ya? lol. can't wait to get THERE!!
I ran aground two days in a row my first times out on Yellowtail. Sucks. Had to be pulled off both times. Now I have a depth sounder.
depth sounder is a good tool for sure.
Other thing you can do is seek deeper water with your anchor tide rises use your windlass our crank of a winch reset anchor to deeper water re do process kedging keep moving with tide until boat is free
Outstanding video. Great sailing. 👍 to Seatow.
Jammin out to pb & cel, love it! Seems like life is way easier if you don't have to protect your pride all the time. Thanks for the video!
Haha.like that you caught that. 🤣😂
I've been aground once and it was at the north end of Mosquito Lagoon. I woke up at 4 AM and went on deck to secure a noisy halyard and went back down to close my eyes for a minute. Woke back up a little after 5 and immediately knew the boat wasn't rocking. I missed my tide window by 15 minutes and was then stuck for like 5.5-6 hours. Made it to St Augustine around 11 that night instead of dinnertime.
happens to the best of us!
All's well that ends well!
thank goodness :)
Wow you guys were really so calm and cool through out this adventure. Good job!
Yay Sea Tow! Hope you guys got some sleep. 😎🥰
I feel so much relief.....great episode of real life cruising.
Phew you and us both!
That was exciting❤
Solder an eyelet in the wire ends. Then just bolt them together and shrink wrap. Easy to replace...
Welcome to the club!
Great antifouling btw...
Omg, this is the one time I'm not envious of you two.
Don’t blame ya! 😅
Crimp, solder, and heat shrink!
I've ran the ground a couple times and I found if I take a zodiac style dinghy with a decent motor push from the center of the boat essentially ramming it with your dinghy consistently puts it at that slight angle where the Keel drags across the sand or hopefully not rocks just an idea for next time hopefully it never happens i enjoy watching your videos peace out
Been there, done that 😂😵💫. Not so funny when it was happening, but with the help of a fisherman we got off and sailed on to the nearest harbour 🎉❤. That's the good thing about a full keel boat ⛵😍, no damage at all ❤
Yah, definitely a little bit nerve wrecking when it’s happening. Yes, the best thing about Saoirse is that full keel!
Looks more like a Gulf of Mexico deal!!
Did a prop test on a boat here in New Port Richey, 3 miles out, took the outdrive right off the back of the boat!!
Grew up in Lake Worth.. why look down!
Over here, it's,,
ONLY LOOK DOWN!!
I feel for ya!!😢😮😮
The scary music when you came into Ponce omg guys! I was just holding my breath lolol😂
I love you guys! It's so good of U 2 share this experience. It could benefit others. And it's just another learning experience 4 U. Safe travels. ❤
it was quite the experience to walk right off the boat. not onto a dock.
Wooweee if that isn't a bit of eeekkk! Good to know your safe n' sound now.
Nice to see the mill pond is still there to anchor in. When I was there last year they where saying about redoing the area, and not seemingly in sailors favor.Atleast you didn't do what I did at Charleston, I came motoring in against a outbound 6knt current. It took a couple hours from the marker to anchor in the middle shallows but I learned. Also the cut south of Charleston against the current, it's more like surfing in reverse and no room to spin around. Just remember if your thinking about coming thru the Okeechobee canal it's a 50' limit at low tide at the rail bridge on the east side of the lake by the lock. And the fella who use to do tipping isn't there anymore. One thing I stick by, if I'm going to run around id rather do it at low tide, atleast then I know I'll eventually get off. But yep I grounded 6 times on my first trip south on the ICW last year, once because of being half awake and moving into a spot at mid tide that left me sitting similar to you two for a few hours.
"I keep convincing myself it will all be worth it."
Lol
if you don't, you should use dielectric grease on your electric connectors to stop corrosion..
we do.
It is the papermill in Georgetown that smells. Great little town though. I drug anchor there in the soupy mess!
Dont forget, if you run aground and start to heel, you may need to shut off the fuel vent line to avoid spilling fuel overboard. And I hope everyone has a shut off valve on their fuel vent lines
Good tip for everyone! for us we have an electric motor.
omygosh! holes in the boat out at sea that one time now shipwrecked? please stay safe love you guys dearly... yes i have run aground but never in the same spot more than once lol
Haha. We will definitely never use this inlet or channel again, so that will ring true here too.
Once you have replaced those connectors tape them up with insolation tape. It helps to prevent the corration
Happens to the best of them. Thanks Beau and Brandy..great eats in Ponce Inlet.
The sandbar definitely had a good eat 🤣😂
Enjoyed that one. Lol. Dont think we talked about it but I almost hit that bar also. Currents rip in there and the water surface really doesnt give you clues like most places. Super sketchy inlet. I enjoyed it much more my second time.
Deren
I can’t believe we didn’t talk about it. That’s one sketchy inlet. Don’t ever need to use it again. 😂
Miss you guys!!
Miss you guys!!
Glad it all worked out 😮
I had trouble with that Ponce inlet going out if you don't have headway that current will run you up on the rocks.
Once in awhile we all get stuck sometimes? No damage no foul! 💙
There is a blessing to y'all running a ground where y'all did. It was sand. When we did it there was rocks and we suffered a little hull damage. Stay playing in da sun and sand...SV Lost Cajun
yikes! yes, thank goodness it was just sand.
Liquid Black Tape on all connections!
I got to say as a photographer the thumbnail is amazing !
Nerve-wracking chapter for sure!