Unconfigured Ad Widget

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Racers may be adreniline junkies . . .

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Racers may be adreniline junkies . . .

    but gill netters are NUTZ! While lounging on the OBX beach I spied a cool boat - a DORY! I trot down the beach to check it out. Tis a gill net crew, and their net is flaked out in the stern of the dory which is mounted stern towards truck on a short trailer that ends midships. The 20+ foot dory is made from juniper wood = light, and the 35 HP outboard is mounted in a well near the bow.

    What fun watching them back the boat into the raging surf! Helmsman ropes the outboard and zooomm ... dory rolls through the surf with the line and then the net peeling out over the stern. A pause about 200 yards offshore while the dory crew sets the net anchor, then the dory goes north and makes a sweeping path toward the beach.

    Okay, thinks me, only one way to get the boat back, and I wuz right. With the crew hunkered down and hanging on, the helmsman beachs the boat! Truck pulls up, crew hooks a bow line to the truck, and the truck backs up to drag the boat well up on the beach.

    One crew dude has his leg in a fiberglass cast. Seems last week the dory got a bit squirrely coming ashore and broached, tossing him out on the beach. Ouch.

    All week I watched them launch and retrieve the net, way cool, but not exactly high on the safe job list. Crew members kept going away, probably to an easy on the bod job like Wal-Mart greeter.

    They'd collect the net around 5 AM, and every morning me'n my grandaughter would be on the scene. Imagine a teenager getting up at that predawn hour. She has good night eyes and would fetch the stray fish that fell out of the net in the wash, and the Old Salt of the crew showed her every different fish. Quite an educational moment. Of course I got involved in helpng the short-handed crew and sure `nuff - a net retrieval mishap swept me off my feet and the net ground a big chunk of skin off my shin. Ouch.

    Next evening the dory guy, working with a green crew, decides to shove the dory into the surf. No prob, we pushed that sucker into the ocean, then the two crew members roll over the chines to board the boat. Darling Grandaughter, who was helping push, figures that looks like fun and JUMPS OVER THE STERN INTO THE BOAT! There she is - grinning and sitting on top of the net which is about one minute from being jerked outta the boat. I yell OUT OF THE BOAT! Still grinning, she bails out and swims ashore. "That was fun, Grandpa," she babbles. Yeah, right, fun - give me a frigging heart attack one time.

    Bottom line - gill netting is a hard way to make a living. Even on a calm day the ocean can be one mean motha.
    carpetbagger

  • #2
    Birdog Boats

    Bill , those boats are called bird dogs, i lived in Fla for awhile they run 6cyl mercs with tillers on some. I think that's in the past though because gill netting has been banned just about everywhere.
    RichardKCMo
    RichardK.C. Mo.

    Comment


    • #3
      Bill, that was a well written narrative! Sounds as if you have a granddaughter much like my youngest daughter.... "Now Jill walk down stream so you don't fall in a hole as you wade (The Arkansas above the Royal Gorge)... tromp, tromp, kerplunk into the hole...she just bobs up and swims on across above the rapids...."

      Yup...just as pig headed as her old man...

      Dan
      O-49



      Comment


      • #4
        Richard K.C. & dcrummett

        Richard

        These guys called the boat a Dory, looked like the east coast dorys I've seen over the years. Engine was a 35 Evinrude, tiller steer. From sightings on various rivers, gill nets are legal in NC, MD, and VA, but this was the first time I've seen gill nets set in the ocean.

        dcrummett

        Many moons ago I walked grandaughter (age 2) over the dunes for her first view of the ocean. "Wheee..." she takes off on a run straight into the surf. She got wet, and I got put on restriction by Grandma.
        carpetbagger

        Comment


        • #5
          same boat diff name

          I know what you mean about those grandkids our youngest G daughter turned 4 today. They are really hard to keep up with. Really good thing mine came with a grandma.

          Bill if you ever seen one of these boats moving at a very slow speed in the backwaters you'd know why the birddog name.

          I didn't know gillnetting was allowed in so many places, the sport people and condo builders have had it banned in many places.
          Richard
          RichardK.C. Mo.

          Comment


          • #6
            Bill, How fast do you think that thing would go? Motor up front, interesting! John 2-Z
            John Runne
            2-Z

            Stock Outboard is all about a level playing field.

            True parity is one motor per class.

            It's RACING, not just another boat ride!

            NOT a representative of Racing Outboards LLC.

            Comment


            • #7
              Dory speed estimate?

              Originally posted by csh2z
              Bill, How fast do you think that thing would go? Motor up front, interesting! John 2-Z
              Hey, with a 35 hp `rude up front, my guess is that screamer might turn 10 mph thru the traps! Okay, maybe 15 mph at WOT with a good onshore breeze while surfing the waves into the beach.
              carpetbagger

              Comment

              Working...
              X