The picture thread got me to thinking just how bad of a time I have with a gopro in the boat. I have tried freshwater fishing with frogs to try and capture the strike and that ended with no fish, a broken trolling motor, and the gopro falling in the water. I tried taking it scalloping and ended up with a few scallops when 2 weeks earlier we limited in 30mins, the cooler that contained what few scallops we had found blowing out of the truck, and somehow the stickit pin managed to get lost as well. The final straw was 2 years ago, I got $700 back from L3 communications when they had to buy back my Eotech holosight and decided to go to Islamorada for spring break with my wife. The marine forecast was beautiful and I had just put new springs on my trailer for my Seapro so we took the boat with us, but I had to stop by my office in Tifton and get the Gopro. 10 hours later the boat was in the basin and all seemed well, the next morning we decided to explore Alligator Reef.

Looks beautiful, but at lunch we headed back in to eat at Robbies and the wind got horrible and so did the seas, that was the wettest ride in I've ever had in my boat. Turns out the marine forecast had changed completely and other than one trip to indian key that afternoon, my boat sat in the basin.

The wind was so bad that when left and stopped at John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park on the way back, they didn't even charge me for my boat because the ranger knew I wasn't going anywhere. After that expensive little trip towing a boat for nothing when we could have driven the car instead, the gopro is forbidden from being in my boat. I have heard of bananas being a bad omen for sailing, but in my case the Gopro is worse. The other couple from Georgia did make me feel better since they had a nice 22ft Nauticstar and they didn't even venture out as much as we did.