‘Thar She Sinks:’ Abandoned Maine Boat Raising Hackles

by Ted Cohen | Feb 18, 2025

The popular old David Letterman gag “Will It Sink or Will It Float?” could use an abandoned Arrowsic boat as a case study.

The derelict vessel in this case ain’t floating – it’s up to its gunwales in frigid, icy sea water.

In fact, it’s not only sunken, but it’s angering neighbors who consider it an eyesore and environmental risk.

“That boat has been there for a couple weeks,” longtime local Arrowsic riverfront taxpayer Bob Caron told The Maine Wire. “I can’t believe they can just leave it there.”

“At some point it will float down the river and become a hazard,” added Caron, a veteran mariner.

Neighbors have been calling on authorities to try to force the owner to remove the abandoned boat.

But the sheriff’s office told WGME the owner has no legal responsibility to remove it from the water.

“No rules like NO rules,” Caron lamented.

The sheriff says the owner of the fishing boat, and his friends, had been living on the “Hook, Line and Sinker” most of last summer and fall.

“At some point he just abandoned it. And it went adrift and wound up getting grounded over there on the beach in Arrowsic,” Sagadahoc County Sheriff’s Sergeant Matt Sharpe said.

The officer says attempts were made to find an agency to remove the boat, but nothing came of it.

“Maine DEP has been involved. Marine Patrol. Coast Guard. Sea Tow. I mean, we’ve had resources out there looking at it. Unfortunately, nobody wants to deal with it,” Sharpe said.

Cops say the boat owner broke no laws.

“Neither Woolwich or Arrowsic have a harbormaster. So there’s no laws pertaining to where they can anchor the boat,” Sharpe said.

He says without local boating laws, it’s as if the boat’s owner did nothing wrong.”

The town of Arrowsic is trying to figure out how to remove the vessel, which has holes in its keel and hull.

A boat-towing company said it would cost around $25,000 to dispose of the boat.

Harbormasters in Maine say derelict boats are a growing problem in coastal communities, costing as much as $3,000 to tow and scrap them, according to Brad Rogers of WGME.

Help Support The Effort

1 Comment

  1. Roger Vincent Tranfaglia

    Drag what’s left of said “boat” most of the way on to a sandy beach. Have a bunch of Middle School/High School kids with various power saws, crow bars, sledge hammers, thick gloves AND safety glasses break the damn thing down in 3 hours. With several Old Salts (mariners/fishermen) to give direction and some quick lessons as to Marine mechanics and electrical systems. Recycle what CAN be recycled and have said students write a report of what they did and LEARNED! Of course they WILL get extra credit for participating as well as the better written reports show up in some of the regional/local papers!
    Any questions???

    Reply

Join the discussion…

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This

Discover more from The Maine Anchor

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading