Well, not really, but an interesting incident of stranding in Chesapeake Bay, Bay Bulletin, Two People, Dog Rescued From Powerboat Aground For Days Off Havre De Grace
It was a slightly unusual call for the Susquehanna Hose Company on the upper Chesapeake Bay: a couple was stranded on their Sea Ray in the shallows off Tydings Park, where the Susquehanna River meets the Bay.I used to fish with Pete on the flats quite a bit. It's basically the drowned delta from the Susquehanna River, a fan of sediment, with old channels running through it, and its all pretty shallow by my standards, except for some dredged channels. Stripped Bass typically come there in early spring prior to the spawn to gorge on herring and shad, prior to the spawn. I remember one day that Pete took his pants off to push the boat in water so shallow the boat would barely float, while Tom, Keith and I caught big stripers on top water lures all around the boat. Lately, the fishing there has not been as good, and the state has shut down catch and release fishing in that time of the year.
The boat, a 1977 30-foot Sea Ray Sedan Bridge, had been anchored in the cove for about five days when it encountered Sunday’s heavy wind and rain. The windy conditions were too much and the boat broke anchor, quickly drifting into shallow water.
The couple aboard were living aboard their boat, having traveled down the Intracoastal Waterway from New England. They dropped the anchor, but the wind kept pushing their boat further onto the flats, where they sat for three days.
Sarah Rae, her partner Bella Eldridge and their small dog, Lily, were there for about two days with the boat listing on its side. They had a generator and a space heater on board, but ran out of fuel.Susquehanna Hose Co. shared this video
from the rescue of the disabled boaters.
They were also beginning to run out of food and Rae’s diabetes medications were running low. Friends on shore tried to help arrange a tow, but the boat was too hard aground and the tide was too low for tow boats to reach the stranded boaters.
The Department of Natural Resources contacted the Susquehanna Hose Company, the only emergency responders in the region with an airboat specifically intended for shallow-water rescues. On Tuesday evening, Air Boat 5 brought the boaters and their dog safely to shore.
“The airboat was a blessing. There was no other way anyone could have gotten to us,” Rae says.
Chesapeake Bay Magazine got a first ride on the Bay rescue vessel back in February. 1st Lieut. Charlie Jones of the Susquehanna Hose Company estimated it would make rescues three times faster on the infamous Susquehanna Flats, where depths and tides vary widely.
When the boaters and dog safely reached shore, Rae was able to treat her diabetes and local marine service provider Joshua Argentino helped set them up with a warm motel to stay in for the night.
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