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Posted

Got out on a beautiful local pond this morning in the kayak, caught a couple largemouth. Two fish for me is a good day!

 

Heading up to camp to get the Tracker jon on the lake tomorrow, car coming at me head on entirely in my lane put and end to that. Driver in oncoming car for whatever reason did not have eyes on the road (dozed off?). I swerved into the other lane but it was too late. Bought the jon new six months ago and built it up over the winter; it was a blast while it lasted but trailer is gone, not sure about the boat (all welded aluminum... cracked welds?) - truck did surprisingly well (rim gone, bumper and sheet metal. Changed the wheel and drove it home).

 

FD guy says "there's your motor" - the awesome strong-running little 1976 Evinrude 15hp 2 stroke broke off, took out a VFW sign post en route, and landed in a ditch on the side of the road. I still haven't figured out how this guy he me in like three different places at the same time :D

 

Both drivers ok, thankfully. A few weeks ago less than a mile from that spot four people died due to improper passing. We'll be using the kayak for the rest of the season ;)

 

 

 

photo1.jpg

photo2.jpg

photo3.jpg

^ 1976 Evinrude 15hp 2-stroke flew into a ditch, took out a sign post

 

photo4.jpg

 

^ glad the mushroom anchor brought the truck to a stop :D

 

 

 

  • Like 2
  • Sad 9
  • Super User
Posted

So glad you weren't injured.

Any chance there's some insurance that could assist in recovering some or all of your losses ?

A-Jay

Posted
1 minute ago, A-Jay said:

So glad you weren't injured.

Any chance there's some insurance that could assist in recovering some or all of your losses ?

A-Jay

Supposedly he is insured - let's hope so. I'll find out more next week.

  • Super User
Posted
Just now, haggard said:

Supposedly he is insured - let's hope so. I'll find out more next week.

Good Luck to you moving forward though you clearly had it on your side when you needed it most today.

:smiley:

A-Jay

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Haggard lives close to me and I am blessed to call him a friend. Thank god he and the other driver are OK. He spent a lot of time and sweat turning his tracker into a good fishing machine. Hope the insurance will make good. As he said that stretch of road has been very dangerous lately. 

 Really makes you not take anything for granted. 

  • Like 2
Posted

Funny part to this story... so when I was a kid my Dad (who some might call obsessive/compulsive) set each of us kids up with a tool box. Color coded, mine was yellow; two sisters had red and blue. Tools were also color coded. Still using those tools 35+ years later. Use them constantly. Today before heading to camp I reached for the yellow wrench set (Dad spray painted them yellow) to unbolt the basement door to put the kayak away before loading up the jon boat, and clearly recall thinking I can't believe I still haven't lost these over the years. Threw them in the boat to head to camp. A couple hours later, when the crash happened, this 5-pc wrench set was scattered in the roadway and hidden in grassy ditches. Literally one by one, found each of the 5 wrenches, and after some searching, the spring clip that held them together. I can't even believe 1) this is what I thought was important at the time and 2) all pieces were recovered, ready for more use. Can't wait to tell Dad the story :D

 

 

wrenches.jpg

  • Like 13
  • Super User
Posted

Glad your OK, and that's great about finding your tools

  • Like 1
Posted
15 minutes ago, jbmaine said:

Haggard lives close to me and I am blessed to call him a friend. Thank god he and the other driver are OK. He spent a lot of time and sweat turning his tracker into a good fishing machine. Hope the insurance will make good. As he said that stretch of road has been very dangerous lately. 

 Really makes you not take anything for granted. 

For the first few months I thought the fishing was the best part. After 10 or 11 months, I'm reminded the people you meet while fishing are the best part. Thank you @jbmaine and the forum.

 

 

  • Like 2
  • Thanks 1
Posted

Glad you're taking this all in stride, hopefully the person's insurance company takes care of it all for you.

  • Global Moderator
Posted

Wow, amazing everyone made it out of that okay. 

  • Super User
Posted

Glad to hear you're okay and able to keep a sense of humor through everything. Hopefully their insurance comes through. 

Posted

First of all - Im glad that you are okay and all of that. 

Things are replaceable, but life is not. 

  • Super User
Posted

What an adventure...glad all is well.

Posted
14 hours ago, haggard said:

glad the mushroom anchor brought the truck to a stop :D

I think you'll find a fluke anchor will grip the asphalt better...

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
  • Super User
Posted

Wow glad your safe. Hopefully insurance should take care of the rest.

Posted
55 minutes ago, Dwight Hottle said:

Wow glad your safe. Hopefully insurance should take care of the rest.

Surely insurance would take care of that. It wasn't his fault at all. ;) 

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Turns out the owner was insured, thankfully. I was surprised at how quickly the insurance co. is processing everything. Truck fix is delayed for 3+ weeks because the shop is busy but it's drivable in the meantime. Boat is declared total loss and check should be cut this week.

 

I was fine with resigning myself to using the kayak for the rest of the season, until my son says yesterday he'd like to try fishing. Wahoo! Wait, no boat... :( so I take him to the rocky beach to learn on the salty shore. He did great on spinners and baitcasters. No fish but this was really just an intro to the gear and techniques. But the lake setting in a boat would have been far better than learning on slippery rocks with waves coming at us. 

 

So we got home and I see my original boat (now totally stripped, as all the parts went to the now dead jon) sitting in the shed, along with the donor/parts motor that also contributed to the jon. Boat, motor and trailer are worn and tired but there may be just enough left of them to put together something that can get on the lake for the rest of the season.

 

This will have to be tiller steer; need to make a makeshift tiller handle, mount the throttle control at the stern; convert long shaft motor to short; somehow tighten the mount to the transom (bolts are seized, motor was used in salt). 

 

Project begins tomorrow. This could be good.

 

haggard.jpg

Posted

Wow; just seeing this thread now. So glad you're ok; sorry to hear about the accident.

I'm in S Maine...I'll pm ya

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Update on resurrecting the old boat with the spare/donor motor to get me through the rest of the season. I had stripped all the electric start and remote control cables thinking I'd just use the rope start, but had no luck pull starting it and it was very exhausting. Over the last couple days I pieced the electric start bits back together. Fortunately I had some photos of the motor when I bought it, showing what cables went where - starter solenoid, start/stop switch, etc. It cranks but doesn't start. Replaced the spark plugs and it fires right up now.

 

This will be a tiller steer but there's no tiller yet. It shouldn't be hard to make a makeshift one. This is for steering only; the throttle control is a separate remote unit. Milk crate seat with flotation cushion; mounted the throttle control nearby; start/stop switch and solenoid mounted to the gunnel.

 

It's ironic that the boat and motor I thought had reached the end of their lives are now coming together. It just might work :)

 

  • Super User
Posted

Good thing that both drivers are ok even though the guy should of been more careful driving. This reminds me of Okeechobee road (US 27) in South Florida. This road has similar accidents since many people on Okeechobee road like to drive +20 mph over the speed limit, skip each other to get ahead,rarely use turn signals when turning, and don't look where they are going. Wish there was more enforcement on the road and not just speed traps that you see from time to time.

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