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JuleZ '02 HEEL, This is for You

prlyles

Hall of Famer
Aug 19, 2006
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A Colorado couple said they sold everything they owned to buy a sailboat and set out for the open seas together.

Within two days, their dream became a nautical nightmare.

On their way to Key West, Tanner Broadwell and Nikki Walsh's voyage abruptly ended in John’s Pass off Madeira Beach, Fla., when their 28-foot sailboat struck something underwater Wednesday night.

"We hit something in about 8 or 9 feet of water and it stopped the boat completely," Broadwell told TV station WFTS.

Water flooded into the cabin, starting to sink their fantasy life. The couple grabbed social security cards, cash, IDs and their pug Remy as they called for rescue.

A ship arrived about an hour later, the Tampa Bay Times reported, but the water was too shallow for it to approach.

So the couple and Remy jumped in, leaving their dream vessel behind to capsize.

"Everything I've worked for, everything I've owned since I was a child, I brought with me. It's just floating away and there's nothing I can do," Walsh told WFTS.

Broadwell and Walsh left Colorado last year after selling off all their belongings, including a car, to buy Lagniappe for $5,000. It took a year and another $5,000 to get the boat ready to sail, Tampa Bay Times reported.

Now, it could cost thousands to remove Lagniappe from the channel.

Even with no savings and no place to live, the couple said they're not giving up on sailing again one day.

"The boat sank," Walsh told WFTS, "but our dreams didn't sink with the boat."

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...le-sells-everything-sailboat-sinks/326152002/
 
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I mean I'm not sure what people expect sometimes.

Would you feel safe and comfortable in a $5k house?

Would you hop in a $5k RV and take off across the country?

And yet people feel like they can beat the system by buying a tired old $5k Craigslist Special boat and living on it ... oh yeah, and go cruising around paradise to boot. Livin' the dream ain't quite that easy.

Obviously we don't have all the facts and details here, but generally hitting the bottom or something else in the water at sailboat speeds shouldn't sink the boat. Something else is at play - previous damage to the keel joint, faulty through-hulls, failed bilge pump, etc. Fortunately for them they were still in an area where help was readily available. And hopefully when it says they sold everything they owned, there was something left over after buying the boat for actual living expenses, so they're not left completely destitute. Gonna go ahead and assume insurance is not in play here.

Sorry for their loss, glad they're ok, and good on 'em for trying to go their own way, but ...
 
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I mean I'm not sure what people expect sometimes.

Would you feel safe and comfortable in a $5k house?

Would you hop in a $5k RV and take off across the country?

And yet people feel like they can beat the system by buying a tired old $5k Craigslist Special boat and living on it ... oh yeah, and go cruising around paradise to boot. Livin' the dream ain't quite that easy.

Obviously we don't have all the facts and details here, but generally hitting the bottom or something else in the water at sailboat speeds shouldn't sink the boat. Something else is at play - previous damage to the keel joint, faulty through-hulls, failed bilge pump, etc. Fortunately for them they were still in an area where help was readily available. And hopefully when it says they sold everything they owned, there was something left over after buying the boat for actual living expenses, so they're not left completely destitute. Gonna go ahead and assume insurance is not in play here.

Sorry for their loss, glad they're ok, and good on 'em for trying to go their own way, but ...
*drops mic*
 
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Dr. Mark Reinecke, St. Petersburg, poses in his backyard with his 1985 Cheoy Lee Pedrick 36' sailboat called "Odyssey." After reading the Times story about the couple who's boat sank in John's Pass, Reinecke sold the boat to the couple for $1. "It makes you feel good that you're helping someone," said Reinecke.

*whose

Seriously though, I hope they spent some of that money on sailing lessons.
 
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