Good tip on having an attached tie-down, I'll get something I can do that with. I suppose we always have lengths of rope on the boat so if the velcro walks off it could be temporarily tied with rope.
I finally got my project Volt done, out of the garage, and sold. Then i pulled the boat in the garage, and had a bit of a setback. See, I was having a ton of trouble pulling the thing around, despite my new trailer dolly. It was fighting me turning, going straight, everything. I was straining and having to have a helper put wheel chocks down to keep it from rolling back every few inches. After finally getting it wrestled into place, I looked it over and discovered something: the bilge plug, still in place from the last time we used it. Two, three months ago? And, of course, the cover leaked. Then the weather turned cold. And now there's a foot of ice in the bottom of my boat.
Well, that sucks. I'm glad I'm learning lessons like this on a $2000 boat.
I couldn't get the bilge plug out since it's frozen solid in there. I pointed a space heater at the bilge plug and left it over night and then was able to push it in with my finger and got quite a rush of nasty horrid bilge water. And it kept coming. And coming. Filling up my 20 gallon tote. I dug up another bilge plug and plugged it from the outside (thank goodness I had another!) and drained the tub. And drained it again. And again. And finally took to using two buckets, swapping back and forth, so I wasn't carrying so much water and didn't have to fumble with the bilge plug between dumps. I lost count of how many buckets of water I emptied, but maybe 100-150 gallons or so? And there's still more ice in the thing. So I put the heater under the cover, on low, with a fan to circulate the air to help melt the ice.
Obviously the hull isn't damaged, or at least not enough to leak, since the nasty bilge water wasn't leaking out. Not a drop, anywhere. I'm sure the bilge pump is destroyed. The engine is fine. The only questions are: battery, gas tank, wiring, and floor. It's possible the ice might have pushed the floor up? I'll have to wait until it's totally defrosted to find out. Once the ice is melted I'll swap the heater out for a dehumidifier and get things dried out in there.
I'm thinking the 1000 pounds of ice in the boat might have had an effect on how hard the boat was to pull around with the trailer dolly. Who wants to throw in odds on damaged stuff? I'm thinking the floor will be fine, or at least good enough to keep using for now. The gas tank is metal so will probably be damaged. The bottom of the battery was under 1" of ice, so who knows, until I get it out of there.
Ahh well, if it was easy everybody would do it.