Hurricane Ian Boats, Here's What Happens To Them

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  • Опубликовано: 30 ноя 2022
  • Lots of people have been asking what happens to the sunk or damaged boats from Hurricane Ian. Here's what happens. This is a boat graveyard located on San Carlos Island, next to Fort Myers Beach.

Комментарии • 136

  • @AmericanConstellation
    @AmericanConstellation Год назад +5

    I'm 64, I've had a boat since I was five, they got bigger and bigger. I have bad dreams at least once a month of finding my boat sunk. I do feel sorry for these people. My boat is part of my soul. Every time I use I'm so happy and I get mentally and physically renewed.

  • @DougVarble
    @DougVarble Год назад +3

    Hurricane’s are what boat manufacturers dream of at night, thanks for the perspective 🎉

  • @leozeek
    @leozeek Год назад +9

    Seeing the distraction of these once fine boats is sickening, thanks for sharing!

  • @MEdGrant
    @MEdGrant Год назад +8

    I shudder to think of how many tens (hundreds?) of millions of dollars worth and tons of plastic resins are going to end up in landfills every time there is a hurricane event like this.

    • @ras9875
      @ras9875 Год назад +1

      Matthew 6:19

    • @Proverbs--tx6yr
      @Proverbs--tx6yr Год назад

      @@ras9875 Amen 😊

    • @marcushennings9513
      @marcushennings9513 Год назад +1

      Most go to a local salvage yard because there's still a lot of expensive brass and fitting on them. My first sailboat sank in a hurricane and the city will bring them up and charge the owner an outrageous amount even put a lein on their home. Mine was moored in a shallow bayou and I did it myself with a froend using my dink, lots of inflatable mattresses and a compressor. Cost me hundreds in comparison to thousands.

    • @Alcisco504
      @Alcisco504 Год назад

      Thats a cool story

  • @janethagen3385
    @janethagen3385 Год назад +3

    I appreciate your video work. I’ve caught every one post hurricane. Thank you so much!

  • @patreilly4293
    @patreilly4293 Год назад +2

    That 50-foot Hatteras belongs to a good friend of mine. We were down there about 2 weeks ago to retrieve the Boston Whaler that had been on its bow. Sad to see but I've shared your video with him.

  • @robertpapps3618
    @robertpapps3618 Год назад +3

    Something I wondered about. Thanks for posting. The landfills will be overflowing!

  • @crystaldixon6787
    @crystaldixon6787 Год назад +3

    I'm just glad that they save and fix up the ones that can float and that are not broken up. I saw another video of a place on land where they store boats they gotten out of the roads and the waterways. And a lot of them look great If I had money and could go and get one to fix up I would go in a heartbeat. Made my day that they are not going to waste, Thank you for all your awesome videos I hope that your town will start to heal and become what it once was. Well, it can't be 100% what it was but it's going to be better than ever we all have faith in you. You guys are muscular and are fighters if anyone can get it all back up and running it's you guys stay strong my friend and god bless you all.

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад

      Thank you!

    • @UNITED2009100
      @UNITED2009100 Год назад

      If you had the money? I fixed one up one time and the cost is much bigger than you would think and after I got done, the boat was still worth less than I spent on it. Used it several years and then sold it. A boats value is based on economics. One day is worth $100,000.00 and a year later it's only worth $30,000.00 if that. Be careful should you try rebuilding a damaged boat.

    • @assymcgee2835
      @assymcgee2835 Год назад

      check with your local marinas, there are always abandoned boats. I paid $1200 for a 32' Carver a year ago, in the water, needed a little engine work, a few windows, stuff like that. She aint perfect but she aint bad.

  • @rla1000
    @rla1000 Год назад +12

    Yes, I've been curious about this. This video answered some basic questions but left many more important ones unanswered. Do owners ever come looking for their boats? Aren't all boats registered, with registration number, etc. that would tie them to an owner? Is there any attempt to contact owner based on reg numbers? Or are boats considered to be abandoned and subject to some sort of salvage law? Who if anybody gives the okay to part or chop up a boat? If a boat is salvageable and repairable, is owner contacted? Who pays for recovery? What about insurance - when is a boat deemed "totaled" and what about costs for repair of salvageable boats? Seems like a lot of legal questions need to answered which would be helpful in understanding the whole process.

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад +8

      Crane crews won't touch a boat unless the insurance company gives the okay. Insurance companies work with salvage companies to either part the boat out or scrap it. The owners have been paid off at this point or released the boats. Sunk boats are now the responsibility of FWC to pull them out as they are past a deadline for the owner and insurance companies to act. We do need to change the salvage laws here in Florida to what they once were. None of these wrecks would be here if public salvagers could lay claims on a abandoned vessel.

    • @MarkMayhew
      @MarkMayhew Год назад +1

      @@CaribbeanCastaways the wrecks wouldn’t be there, correct, they’d have been stolen

    • @MarkMayhew
      @MarkMayhew Год назад

      @@CaribbeanCastaways actually the wrecks would still be there, the intact boats wouldn’t be there

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад +3

      @@MarkMayhew That type of salvage is a big part of Key West's history. The Wreckers.

    • @insmileyfacemur4242
      @insmileyfacemur4242 Год назад

      @@CaribbeanCastaways just being curious what happened to all those boats or what

  • @coldmidgetts
    @coldmidgetts Год назад +1

    great video

  • @lynneslade513
    @lynneslade513 Год назад

    Good question tho where do they put all that once they are done ripping them up?

  • @BobABooey.
    @BobABooey. Год назад +2

    They need one of those giant car shredders to feed the boats into.

  • @MrKmoneyone
    @MrKmoneyone Год назад +2

    Would love to find a set of spare props. Any salvage yards I can call?

    • @robertpalmer3166
      @robertpalmer3166 Год назад +1

      Call me crazy, but I'd search salvage yards in that area on the exact same internet that you made that comment on.

    • @b.atwater3904
      @b.atwater3904 Год назад

      I have several pair of bronze props , three and four blade, most are 14×16 or so, most are 1 1/4" shaft and larger from my yachts ranging from 36 to 40 feet, mostly diesel, some gas .
      Located in Michigan, can ship .

  • @akbychoice
    @akbychoice Год назад +1

    Curious if the fiberglass could be ground up and used in road building concrete?

  • @thomasbrasse3145
    @thomasbrasse3145 Год назад +1

    Wonder where that catamaran on the barge went. Looks like a good project.

  • @geraldinelucas3143
    @geraldinelucas3143 Год назад +6

    I hope someone will video the UN-stacking of the shrimp boats getting them back in the water or those that will not be repaired. So hard on the owners and how sad for such great loss.

    • @ralphbourke5473
      @ralphbourke5473 Год назад

      I worked on a shrimp boat in another life based out of Fort Myers named Moon Shadow, I wonder if Pat will be able to salvage her?

  • @billlawton1186
    @billlawton1186 Год назад

    That was once a beautiful Hatteras being devoured. Oh what I would do for some of those parts!

  • @stbroker1
    @stbroker1 Год назад +1

    How one goes about if he wants to purchase one of these boats? What’s the process who to contact?

  • @sasquatchcreativityinthefo8573

    I am sure someone must have checked out the interior of the boats for valuables? Safes, lockers, draws, etc? It's a shame to see so many once beautiful boats end up this way, but with so many under water, the cost to repair is too much $$$$$$$ Thanks for the update.

  • @ellieramseyer2291
    @ellieramseyer2291 Год назад +1

    This is so incredibly sad and hard to watch...

  • @Driftwood50
    @Driftwood50 Год назад

    Who do we contact to buy some parts that they saved

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад

      I'm not sure. Don't know where they go after salvage companies get them.

  • @bryandamkaer3646
    @bryandamkaer3646 Год назад +4

    Sad...

  • @sandrawesseln9619
    @sandrawesseln9619 Год назад

    The old Hatteras is giving the excavator a work out.

  • @pinkladybikermamma3603
    @pinkladybikermamma3603 Год назад +1

    I AGREE ON CHANGE THE SALVAGE LAWS OF FLA. MANY OF THE ON BOARD HARDWARE AND ENGINES(WHICH MOST ARE DIESEL) CAN BE SALVAGED + WHATEVER ELSE YOU CAN STRIP DOWN.

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 Год назад +1

    It would be quicker if they used a road-compacting sheepshead roller. That would flatten the boats within one minute, while punching hundreds of big holes everywhere, making the work of the machine shown here much easier and quicker.

  • @lisas9034
    @lisas9034 Год назад +1

    If not claimed by the owners within a certain amount of time, or not reported to the insurance companies, (many of these boats do not have the proper insurance for hurricane disasters), the salvage companies get to keep the boats and recover what they can from them. The salvage companies make $$ this way.

  • @edbardoe2195
    @edbardoe2195 Год назад

    Boat graveyards like these are all over Florida, and they get plenty of new arrivals even in a year with no hurricane.

  • @MrMarkar1959
    @MrMarkar1959 Год назад +2

    Anybody looking to purchase ANY vehicle or boat after a Hurricane is nuts.

  • @lisas9034
    @lisas9034 Год назад +2

    Many people lost their livelihoods from this devasting event!

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад

      Very true. It's all very sad.

    • @ras9875
      @ras9875 Год назад

      On the bright side there will be many jobs for years to come

  • @davidsharpe426
    @davidsharpe426 Год назад +2

    Real shame !!

  • @jeffbryan2591
    @jeffbryan2591 Год назад

    A lot of the boats they’re crushing are the older ones . They are way better built than the boats of today . And better looking by far .

  • @paulhaas4299
    @paulhaas4299 Год назад +1

    You can call this the Lot of Broken Dreams.😪

  • @leevandyke8524
    @leevandyke8524 Год назад

    Sad to see this chopped up .

  • @jodiplock4784
    @jodiplock4784 Год назад

    ☹️

  • @treashurehunter800
    @treashurehunter800 Год назад +2

    3:13 that big boat is peeling a little too easy.🧐😏🥺

    • @ralphbourke5473
      @ralphbourke5473 Год назад +1

      I have owned both, consider a sailboat as the same lack of quality as a camper, only difference is a boat is nothing more than a whole in the water you continuously pout money! I will never forget the feeling sitting by the window watching the snow fall on both a camper and a sailboat knowing the payments are due same day!

    • @clham612
      @clham612 Год назад

      I notice that nothing valuable is coming out of that boat. Everything of value appears to have already been salvaged.

    • @ralphbourke5473
      @ralphbourke5473 Год назад

      They are overpriced Campers built to fall apart before you have the chance to pay it off, only difference is one is supposed to float while the other rolls!

    • @ralphbourke5473
      @ralphbourke5473 Год назад

      @@clham612 Most people scuttle their own boats just prior to the storm knowing the chances of the boat surviving are slim to none. That doesn't stop the pirates who steal what they can with in minutes of the storms passing.

  • @thatguy8005
    @thatguy8005 Год назад

    Wrecked boats… like wrecked cars… can it be rebuilt?

  • @scottireland5414
    @scottireland5414 Год назад

    Seems like they could have at least saved the anchor for resale. Sailboat gib sheet tracks and block cars can be easily removed for resale.

  • @deerslayer59202
    @deerslayer59202 Год назад +1

    Sad. But some people have job security for a long time.

  • @robpowell461
    @robpowell461 Год назад +1

    Sometimes there's no place to hid

  • @chrisgallagher3703
    @chrisgallagher3703 Год назад +1

    I can puke just watching this video...what a shame ! Boats that I'll never in my life be able to afford just being chopped up and put in dumpsters! Don't get me wrong I totally get it...Its just such a shame !

  • @elred7330
    @elred7330 Год назад +2

    WHY NOT USED SOME OF THESE BOATS FOR THE HOMELESS TO LEAVE IN GET A NICE PLOT OF LAND AND THOSE THATS SALVAGEABLE TURNS THEM INTO HOMES FOR THE HOMELESS, SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT. ✌ ☮.

  • @TheMambomaster
    @TheMambomaster Год назад +1

    I need transmissions and props. Who has access to them?

  • @brandonthorbahn2405
    @brandonthorbahn2405 Год назад

    I need a pair of big blocks if any are salvaged from the area!$$$

  • @amunderdog
    @amunderdog Год назад +2

    Best i remember? Not recyclable

  • @rainman7992
    @rainman7992 Год назад

    who pays for the cost of recovery, transport and salvage ?

  • @stoneskipper7625
    @stoneskipper7625 Год назад +1

    Sad. Waste. Nightmares..

  • @SCOTTBULGRIN
    @SCOTTBULGRIN Год назад +1

    😢 A sad ending to the vessels. See you in Davey Jones locker.🏴‍☠️

  • @may86bear
    @may86bear Год назад +1

    I have a feeling that a lot of boats will end up being abandoned by their owners. Such a shame and waste😢🤔

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад +1

      A lot have. Now FWC (Florida Fish 7 Wildlife Conservation Commission) has to clean them up. Owner no longer own the vessel at that point I believe.

    • @briananderson8733
      @briananderson8733 Год назад

      @@CaribbeanCastaways Considering Florida is a place where many people have a SECOND home and don't live there all the time, that seems a bit harsh. After a hurricane and the destruction of your home how would you go about attempting to locate your boat? It doesn't appear that there is much infrastructure restoration happened yet.
      Big question is what constitutes abandonment and how does the clock figure into it given loss of 2nd house.

  • @pilothouseking
    @pilothouseking Год назад

    I’m pretty sure none are legally “parted out”. Too many possible liabilities to allow anyone in there, even IF one can ascertain legal ownership.

  • @treashurehunter800
    @treashurehunter800 Год назад +1

    About 10 years worth of work.

  • @davidsalzman4672
    @davidsalzman4672 Год назад +1

    After watching many of your videos, I am trying to picture the mountain of debris that is being created somewhere nearby. The nightmare that this will all be repeated as storms become more devastating.

    • @ralphbourke5473
      @ralphbourke5473 Год назад

      Isn't it ironic we've been to the moon, own military weapons that can blow mother earth to a vapor 80 times over again but haven't solved the land -fill problem. What's Joe Bidens New Green Deal Quick Fix on that while he refuses to talk about the future of air travel while he bans all fossil fuel autos in 13 years? I'd say the Biden clown has a lot to explain.

  • @susiefairfield7218
    @susiefairfield7218 Год назад

    Charlotte County here.....ppl are getting 10k from their insurance policies ..some even less...so recouping unless insured to the gils is just not gonna happen...smh.. why have insurance if it doesn't pay? And FEMA...fer get it......

  • @hoopoo3721
    @hoopoo3721 Год назад +1

    I wonder where the money goes?

  • @lutomson3496
    @lutomson3496 Год назад

    those insured are there...the not insured are still out there..good to see them chopped up and recycled

  • @rumblechick73
    @rumblechick73 Год назад

    I keep wondering if after all the saleable and reusable goodies are stripped if it would be more cost-saving to take them out far enough offshore to sink for more artificial reefs.

    • @jeffreystorer4966
      @jeffreystorer4966 Год назад

      The EPA are very difficult in Australia with sinking for reefs ,oil fuel etc be same USA, and unless anchors set they tend to move around in current , shame to see all those lovely boats lost ,the sheer lazyness of yards and owner s failing to prepare for storm tie down etc makes me weep

    • @rumblechick73
      @rumblechick73 Год назад

      @@jeffreystorer4966 While I'm sure there was some laziness involved, I doubt it was on the part of the marinas. This storm was an anomaly and kind of ripped docks and buildings right out of the ground, so no amount of tying down would have mattered much.
      Yep, they are pretty careful here about what is allowed to be used for making reefs, and of course, removing any chemicals would be required.

    • @jeffreystorer4966
      @jeffreystorer4966 Год назад

      @@rumblechick73 I live aboard in cyclone belt Australia ,we take our boats up creeks ,tie em in mangrove swamps ,n stay aboard,2 yrs ago we had similar storm ,four LGE commercial boats lost out of about 3oo ,well prepared boats ,both on hardstands , mooring and in creek system , the town got badly damaged , so it's possible for well prepared boats to survive , but every owner has to make the effort to properly sercure their vessel , everyone pitches in to help each other ,one loose boat starts a chain reaction of misery ,no boats are allowed to stay in jetty births , with there being so many boats badly proped not tied down and owners ,who left it to the marina staff is shameful,boats are like pets if you can't take responsibility for em you shouldn't have one , I get a bit pissy about it because every time these things happen my insurance double in price ,O and I like boats more than most people LoL have a great Christmas

  • @orangekayak
    @orangekayak Год назад

    Boats are some of the most stupid things people can have. Especially these fiberglass pieces of garbage that sit floating on docks in Florida 99.99% of the time. It would be easier to just burn the money in a fire prior to casting a mold. And yes, I have had several boats in my life. They are fun for about a year before becoming an albatross. I am sure the majority of owners of these boats getting shredded were THRILLED to learn their boats sunk and they would be getting insurance checks.

  • @davidgribble263
    @davidgribble263 Год назад +1

    Think how many sunk their boats on purpose ???????????

  • @danielweise5968
    @danielweise5968 Год назад

    I can't watch...

  • @tjmmcd1
    @tjmmcd1 Год назад +1

    No worth watching as not a single word is uttered. Half the video shows a single boat being trashed by a large excavator.

  • @DriveSafeDon
    @DriveSafeDon Год назад +1

    One thing for sure they’ll be a lot of used parts for sale
    🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @phillc1073
    @phillc1073 Год назад

    I AM SURE THE RICH WHO OWN THESE BOATS...ARE WELL INSURED.....

  • @DickDizzy
    @DickDizzy Год назад +7

    Maybe someday someone can explain why these boats weren't relocated, or drydocked, or anything DAYS prior. The waste, the spill of oil and gas in the waterways, the BS !!!

    • @CaribbeanCastaways
      @CaribbeanCastaways  Год назад +1

      I've explained it many times in previous comments. I'll just make a video.

    • @jamesstuart3346
      @jamesstuart3346 Год назад +2

      Because "days prior" nobody knew exactly where Ian would come ashore, so there was no safe place to relocate to. Also these boats are in water year round so there isn't nearly enough space on land to park them all. And finally, a hurricane easliy knocks boats off their stands so parking them is no help

    • @delanieowens2133
      @delanieowens2133 Год назад

      Worth more with insurance.

    • @DickDizzy
      @DickDizzy Год назад +2

      Thanks for your replies.
      So couldn't many of those boats have relocated in the Colooseahatchie Intercoastal waters and anchor there for two nights ?

    • @johnbraun61
      @johnbraun61 Год назад +2

      When you have 15,789 boats to remove or dry dock there is no infrastructure to support.