any idea what kind of boat that is...it seems to be pretty stable in that it 
just keep sailing away with no one to control it.  I guess it would be pretty 
hard to capsize that boat even if you were trying!Danny

---------- Original Message ----------
From: "Della Barba, Joe" <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Isaac..Dauphin Island Without Power Thanks to Runaway 
Boat
Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2012 13:41:21 -0400


<![endif]--><![endif]--> 
During Isabel a boat took out the power line that supplies my island. The boat 
had been hauled out, but the water rose enough for the boat to float off her 
cradle and take off across RT 50.
 
Joe Della Barba
 
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Dennis C.
Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2012 12:36 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Isaac..Dauphin Island Without Power Thanks to Runaway 
Boat
 
It was me!  It was me!   NOT!!
 
Never underestimate the idiocy of a boater.
 
Poor Dauphin Island.  In 1979, Hurricane Frederic destroyed the old Dauphin 
Island Bridge.  A ferry was used for many months while the new bridge was being 
built.  The ferry continues today but runs across the mouth of Mobile Bay 
between Dauphin Island and Fort Morgan.
 
Story had to be a bit off with the statement about the boat "sailing back into 
the open waters of the Gulf".  The boat had to be in Bayou Aloe on the north 
side of Dauphin Island.  The power lines run west of the Dauphin Island Bridge 
across Pas au Herons, a body of water that connects Mississippi Sound with 
Mobile Bay then across Bayou Aloe.  To sail into the Gulf, the boat would have 
to sail a very narrow channel, pass through the Dauphin Island Bridge then turn 
south and sail out the mouth of Mobile Bay or sail 13 miles around the western 
tip of Dauphin Island.
 
Dennis C.
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