Helping pickup a FREE (sunken) Macgregor Venture 21
Article By ShortyI was inbetween big boats, and was looking for a free bare hull that I could bring back from the dead. I knew that I either wanted an ODay 19 or a Venture 21. They are both in the size range of the largest I want to tow with my minivan, and are big enough to sleep my whole family. Of the two, the Venture is faster because it is 300 lbs lighter, and the hull is narrower. But I was more interested in the ODay because it had an 8' cockpit, and an extra foot of beam with a flatter bottom, so would have more initial stability. Ahhh.... the endless decisions on what compromises are more important to you when you get the next boat. I searched around and found an ODay 19, so brought that one home.


Wow, a sunken boat !! Little did he know, this made it even more attractive for me to help recover!! I have dragged home a lot of boats, but never had the opportunity to raise a sunken boat like this.

Talking with him further, I learned a little bit of the history. When Josh came to look at buying his house, he looked in the canal and tied up to the bulkhead was a 21' sailboat. He asked about it, and the seller (in a joking tone), said "buy the house, and the sailboat comes with it". Then they went to look at other parts of the house. When buying the house, Josh asked his realtor if the guy was serious, the realtor assured him that he was not, and he would not be getting the boat.
Moving day came, Josh moved in and the boat was floating around the canal, tied up to a tree around the corner in an undeveloped area. Asking around, Josh found out that it had previously been owned by the couple that lived across the canal (the house shown in this photo). They got divorced, the husband left the boat for the wife to contend with. She was not interested in it, so she offered it around for free, and the previous owner of Josh's house accepted it. Then after a while, he lost interest and in the middle of the night took it back across the canal and tied it up to the lady's dock again. She was pissed ! She said that he accepted it, and she didn't want it back! So she set it free and it floated around the canal for a while, and then it was tied to the tree in the undeveloped area.
Josh was cleared by all the neighbors to adopt this boat, and he was elaited. He spent a month cleaning up the boat, power washing it, cleaning out the inside etc. Didn't have a motor or sail rig, so he paddle it around a couple times in the canal with a paddle. Josh was ready to fix her up the right way, and started to call around to try and figure a way to register the boat. Without the title, or previous owner, it is impossible to get it registered in Texas. He tried anyway, calling the coast guard, Texas parks and wildlife, the local sheriff, anyone that had anything to do with boats he tried and failed miserably. Worse yet, they told him since he tied it up to his bulkhead, it was now his responsibility and he would be liable if it ever broke free and damaged another boat, or became a hazzard to navigation. If that didn't destroy his dream enough, it suddenly started to take on water. Sinking slowly (just a little lower every day), it was a depressing situation.
It's berth was in the canal, and if it sunk, it would be a hazzard, so Josh went to move it back to the undeveloped area around the side. When moving, the knot holding it to the cleat was so tight, he had to cut it, and just as he did a gust of wind blew on the hull and the rope slipped from his hand. The boat was heading out into the canal and towards the million dollar yachts just a few yards away!! Luckily a fisherman was coming down the ways and caught the boat, returning it to Josh.
The local housing developers saw what was going on, and said that if it was still there when they developed that property, they would have to haul it away with a backhoe, definitely destroying it in the process and possibly sticking him with the bill. So Josh was out of options and posted it up on Craigslist, "Free 21' sailboat".
Previous Title Owner, Currently On File
When I found out about the boat, and Bill said he wanted it, the first thing I did was get the TX numbers from Josh and run them at Texas Parks. They gave me the previous title owner's name, and lucky for me it was a unique one, there were only 2 people with that same last name in all of Houston. So I called them both, one turned out to be the last owner, his name is Mark.
Talking with Mark, I found out a little more history. He had purchased the boat from a doctor for $2100 back in 1991, and sailed it often. It was a great boat for him, and was enjoyed many weekends. But work took over Mark's life, and so the boat sat in Mark's driveway for a number of years, it's only purpose at that point was a place for a few of his cats to sleep. Mark and his wife like pizza, and they would order pizza once a week. For the previous 3 years, they had the same driver every week, and then one day the pizza driver asked about the boat. Mark talked to him a bit, knew he was dirt poor but a very nice guy, so he sold the boat to him for $100. The pizza driver then sailed her every chance he could get, right up till his work visa expired and he was being forced to leave back to Armenia. He called up Mark and offered to give the boat back, but Mark and his wife were used to the boat being gone, and pleased with the idea it went to the friendly pizza driver, so he said to just sell it to someone and keep the money.
I explained what I knew from Josh, and described it's current status of being sunken. Having never raised a sunken boat, I described our plan of renting a gasoline driven pump, and pumping out the water. Mark used to work in the oil industry and said it would be no problem at all, that little boat would just pop right back up to the surface. He had previously raised barges off the bottom, they were a little bit more work. Mark also agreed to order a new title and send us a signed one, so that Bill would be able to register the boat in his name, and get her back on the water. PLAN A
I don't know anyone who has recovered a sunken boat before, the only reference I have is once I saw it done on the discovery channel. They used divers to locate the holes in the boat, patch them up, air bags to raise the boat to the surface, then pump the water out. The way the boat sat, at high tide the water was over the coaming and some friends were speculating that the water would just rush in at the same rate the pump would lift it out. Also there was a hatch on the bow deck, and we know for a fact that hatch will leak like a sieve around the edges. Worst case scenario, we get down there and try to pump it out, if it doesn't work out, we can just leave it there and all we have lost is our time and the cost of the pump rental.


Incase the hose wouldn't reach, or incase we had to continually run the pump while we towed it to the boat ramp, I built a small simple plywood kayak to carry the pump. It only took $35 worth of materials and 2.5 hours to make, but we ended up not using it.










This pic shows us moving out from the canal into the channel between Clear Lake and Galveston Bay.


"Tada, that piece of cr*p is gone!"
"Hey, who stole my boat?"
"Now are you ready to start on that sunken barge?"
You can see the sunken barge off to the side, it had been sunk there for a longer time, we speculated a bit on how it would be a nice floating dock. But not today... we will leave that for someone else.






