There was another thread here lately asking about guys falling out of the boat. I have a story but it is probably better posted here. A year or two after I purchased my first boat, this was at least 25 years ago, I was on a spring trip on Kentucky Lake. It was a warm day and my fishing partner and I were going to break for lunch and make the one mile run back to camp. Like I said, I had my new Ranger a little while and was happy with how stable the boat was. You could walk on the edge of the boat and it would barely tip. Compared to the small tin boats I'd fished in before, I could not imagine how you could tip one over. My confidence was far outweighed by my ignorance. Anyway, I pushed the throttle forward and the nose went up. Just before the boat got on plane and I could trim the motor out, one of my rods started moving and I thought it might fall out of the boat. As I reached for it with my left hand, I must have relaxed my grip on the steering wheel and the wheel quickly spun out of my hand and the boat turned hard right. The next thing I knew, I was hitting the water, having been thrown out. As I said, I was ignorant and neither of us was wearing a life jacket and the kill switch was not attached to me. I am not much of a swimmer but I came up, looked around and saw my boat still turning in tight circles in the middle of the lake. Luck was with me that day. First, that my partner and I were both thrown outside the circle that the boat was making. Second, that other fishermen saw us and soon plucked us out of the water. And third, that my boat did not strike anyone or anything else. A CPO got me on his boat and tried to stall my boat by throwing a bundled up rope in its path but it did not work. After about 45 minutes, the boat ran out of gas and stopped. The only damage done was to my partner who cut his chin on the way out of the boat. I was shaken up by what could have been a fatal mistake but thanked God we came out OK. Obviously, I learned quite a lot that day about the importance of life jackets and kill switches.