Discussed it with the scoutmaster, checked it at the house and it turns out my girls wanted to come back from the beach on Sunday rather than labor day Monday. Scouts were good to go. Then up pops Gustav.
Started loading the Ol' Pro and couldn't find my electronics bag. I always keep it behind my truck seat. Remembering that I had a friend who wasn't used to my routine with me the last time I used the boat, I called my son to check at the farm on the off chance that it had been put with my tackle boxes. It had. Beginning to wonder if this was another sign.
Got up yesterday morning and the trees were bending. Went to the church to meet and everyone was game to keep moving and looking at weather. Looked at my trailer tires and both of my front tires were showing abuse. They were almost new, but almost gone. Checked the lug wrench in the Church van and it would not fit the trailer lug nuts. About that time, one of the newest scouts remembers that he forgot his required permission slip. A call to his dad to meet us at Wallymart and we are off to get a tire lug wrench. Then we were off with a wing and a prayer. Saw 5 or 6 folks pulling their boats back to town on the Mayo - Steinhatchee road and wondered if we had made the right choice.
Got to the Hatch and wend was blowing out of the east, water was high and I knew I could run fairly close to shore to keep out of the nasty stuff. Went to launch the boat and the batteries were dead. I had evidently not clicked the battery selector into off position well enough. The AM/FM radio will not turn off (2nd replacement for same problem) and it had evidently drained the batteries. Try to pull out and the church van tried to spin down in the shell ramp. Luckily a friendly Hatch resident was there and he hooked a tow rope and pulled us out. Hit the Ace hardware and a hundred dollars later had a new battery. Decided to use the zoo ramp (Jenna). Lined her up, put in the new battery and waited for a couple of Captains to crash their boats into their trailers and then we launched. At both ramps, my young nephew asked me at least a 1000 questions. I needed my ear plugs bad.
I've been going out of the Hatch for nearly 50 years and I had always found scallops and clear water at Pepperfish Keys and that is where I headed. The two adults with me decided to sit on the stern even after I warned them that it could be wet back there. It was and they were.
The new kid (the one who forgot his permission slip) pops the question ... are there sharks out here. I could not tell a lie. Yes, there are sharks where ever you find saltwater, but in over 50 years of swimming, diving and scalloping, I've never been biten and never had one come close while scalloping. He was reluctant to get into the water.
Moved back out and while samwitches are being made, I jump back in and show them that there are a few more scallops out there. They get back in and between the 6 of them, find 3 more scallops. They complain and I jump in again and within 5 minutes show them several more. If the sun is out, you can find them, but if a cloud blocks it, no go. I get back in the boat and start cleaning scallops. One kid (the new kid) keeps finding my discarded shells and getting all excited. Yep, he still ain't move far from the boat.
The seas are laying down. I point the Ol' Pro north and we have a nice run to the hill. In the channel a 25' footer with twins decides he must get a head of me and does so.
Got all the way back to Valdosta and neither of the trailer tires I was worried about blew. The boys pulled the hose and the Ol' Pro got a good scrubbing. She looks pretty good all spiffed up. Got home, took my shower, eat 4 ibuprofens and hit the hay. I'm dragging today, but all in all it was worth it to introduce a couple of new kids to shark week and a couple of old salts to good times.




