
OK, maybe that's a little dramatic, but here's the deal: The Triton in the above photo was, prior to the storm, in great shape. The interior was rough, but the decks seemed pretty good and she was clean. I have met the boat, but never the owner.
As it stands now, most of the insured boats have been removed from the harbor for repair or salvage auction. Those that remain are, in large part, the neglected hulks we discussed in the Aluminum Chainplates thread. The cost of recovering these vessels is very steep. For instance, I talked with one owner who paid $3000 to have his Easterly picked up off the sea wall and put into the water next to the seawall. So, many owners have left their boats to fate and are spurning efforts of recovery in the face of such steep costs.
Is that the case with this Triton? I don't know. I do know that it hasn't moved from this spot and is open to the weather. It has to be taking on water. A somewhat distant visual inspection reveals topsides damage, a lost rig, no pulpits or good stanchions (wonder if it rolled?), and myriad other, minor issues.
Coincidentally, I heard just yesterday of a derilect Triton not too far from New Orleans. It has no portlights, no rudder, and very little hardware, but the rig is with the boat. What if I could put that rig on this Triton?
I have no idea how to reach the owner. The harbor master was laid off with most of the city personnel. If the boat just sits there, it's likely to sink sooner or later as the companionway is wide open and the boat isn't secured to anything.
So, what would you do? Move the boat to a slip and leave a note? Pump her out and leave a note? Just leave a note? Or nothing?
As litigious a world we live in, I'm awful hesitant to go near it. At the same time, I see this boat almost every day and it kills me.