I went out Tuesday morning with my business partner for some essential CPD on the Isle of Wight. Lovely trip across from the Hamble and the breakfast was filling.
Back to work for the afternoon then home.
It was such a nice evening that I decided to take the family out for cruise up the Hamble for drinks and nibbles. It was lovely weather with no wind so had a nice time attempting to catch fish with son No. 2 to no avail. Lots of friendly people out enjoying the summer sun.
As dusk approached we set off back to the mooring which is only half a mile from where we were.
On the way down saw a chap on a boat waving with both arms (recognized distress sign I recalled after prompting from son No. 1).
Went alongside and the chap said he had run out of fuel having been skipping around the Solent earlier in the day. I think his fuel gauge was faulty as it was showing half full.
He requested a tow to the Premier fuel pontoon which is just down from where we moor so I agreed to tow him down there...
As the river gets rather narrow and the light was fading I decided to lash the boats together so that I could control the direction of travel and wouldn't therefore have a boat flopping around behind me as I went past all the moored boats.
All connected up then started off but went round in circles despite full lock on the engine!
So I ended up towing the boat on a short rope anyway.
We had various hazards (Eastlands marina, M27 bridge, right turn to Foulkes, left turn through railway bridge, narrow through the cabin marina etc).
I slowed as I went through the narrow Cabin boatyard moorings as I reckoned that damage at 2.5 kts was probably much less than if you hit at 5 kts!!
Only problem was that the boat being towed started to swing at the slower speed. Once I could see that the A27 bridge was clear I increased speed which brought it back under control.
No pressure with £500K boats either side x many!
As we approached the Premier fuel barge the tide runs sideways across the river so it was an interesting moment as we swung hard left into the relative calm of the marina.
We eventually got the boat alongside and the chaps thanked us and fuelled up.
Some lessons learnt:-
Have some spare fuel on board as a "get you home"
Don't try to move a 26ft boat with a 19 ft boat strapped to it
Be nice to people and they may help you out when you need it! (they were very nice people by the way!)


