“I was headed off shore the day before Allison hit in 2001,” stated Bill. “The next morning I’m probably 70-80 miles out headed to a specific spot. By the time I got out there I couldn’t even hear the weather guy anymore, but he had been saying it was going to calm down the next day. By three o’clock in the morning I’m seeing lightning start at one horizon and go all the way across, back and forth and the wind is getting stronger and stronger, Allison is building up. I started flipping channels trying to catch an update, listening to what I could hear from the offshore supply boats and such on the Coast Guard channel. I heard this one guy say it was blowing a hundred miles an hour and the low pressure was sitting right there and it was going to build up stronger the next day. I had already anchored up at three a.m. and was going to wait it out. A few hours later I got up and opened the side door and stuck my head out and the wind was blowing so hard it was stinging my face. I said, ‘whoa, boys, this is looking a little tropical out here!’ It was supposed to get worse and sit there for three days, so I said, ‘we gotta go!’ I pulled the anchor up and we started heading in. That was an all day nightmare trying to get in. The Hill Bank, a big long shoal that runs off of Louisiana and kind of down towards Freeport, is thirty miles out and it comes up to about twenty foot of water. When I got into the Hill Bank the seas were twenty foot in twenty foot of water. It was hairy, we were going with the wind and it took us ten hours to get in. By the time I got in the low pressure moved on in the next day over Houston and stalled, so I turned around and went back out,” he chuckled.
“I was headed out from Galveston one evening to fish,” said Bill. “We came through the jetties, which are about two miles long, and turned south, heading toward the Candy Stripe. It was a rig, twenty miles out, or so, painted red and white all the way up the tower and fishing was pretty good there,” noted Bill. “I had a plotter on my boat which draws a line as you travel. We got out there and it was rough, I mean it was right at the point where you shouldn’t do it, you didn’t need to be there really, but we were desperate, trying to make money. It was me and one guy and we get out there and get all the doors open and are ready to start towing and I was feeling bad. I felt okay going out, but the further we got offshore, I mean it was rough, by the time I got ready to fish I was feeling really sick, I must have picked up a bug. I started fishing and I just couldn’t do it. I don’t ever lie down, never have, I just push on through, but this time I just couldn’t. I told the boy, ‘bring everything back in, we’re going in, I just can’t do it, I’m too sick.’ So, I turned us around and we’re twenty miles out, you’re talking about eight knots, almost a three hour run from where we were going to fish. I had it on the plotter all the way out there and I had the radar for nighttime working. So I set everything up for the boy, I told him to follow the plot line and he’d been on the radar enough times, he knew how to use it, and I went to lie down. The plotter uses a dot system, it takes a reading every so often and draws a line to plot your course. Well, when it took a reading it set a dot on one side of the jetty and one on the other, which was around the bend and plotted the course straight across it. I usually lie down for thirty minutes then get back up, but this time when I lay down I was out. I never do that! The next thing I knew, I was on the floor, and I knew something bad had just happened, you don’t get knocked in the floor unless it’s something bad. Sure enough, he followed the plot lines right across that jetty. It was rough and high tide and the south wind just pushed the water up and it was breaking over and covering the jetty. My first thought was we had hit a ship. I jumped up and ran up to the wheel and knocked him back. The motor is still wide open and we’re sitting up on top of these rocks, you don’t get off that, that’s it, your boat’s done. I looked to the right and the doors are out there and I saw the waves breaking and my knees just went weak and I though, life jacket! I slowed the boat down and took it out of gear and thought, I wonder if the prop will turn backwards I can at least try and get off, so I put it in reverse. The waves would come up and hit the boat and then a big wave hit and I felt a bump and it inched back about an inch. I thought, ‘holy moly’ just maybe I can get it off of here. It did it three more times and each time I felt in inch back, then the fourth time it just turned loose and came off. It was half way on the jetty but the waves were so high and the wind and I was able to get it off and not put a big hole in my boat, it pushed the front in like an accordion though. When I finally got it off I backed it up to a safe distance and thought, I’ve got to have a hole in my boat. I backed it up a pretty good ways in case I had to drop anchor and work on it, I didn’t want it near the rocks. I told the boy, ‘you go down there and see if there’s any water coming in the boat, hurry!’ I had to hang onto the wheel cause the wind was still blowing and I had to keep it away from the rocks. It seemed like a long period of time to me that he was gone but I couldn’t leave and check. Finally, he appeared and just stood there looking at me. I said, ‘well?’ He responded, ‘well what?’ I said is there water coming in the boat,” exclaimed Bill agitatedly. “He said, ‘yup,’ I said HOW MUCH water son, is it a bunch, can you stick your finger in it, what’s the deal? He thought a minute and said yeah, you can stick your finger in it,” laughed Bill recalling his frustration. “I knew if that was all it was we could make it in. That was pretty scary. My brother Randy’s boat the Prowler, was on the rocks once and it went down. It was anchored on the north side around ’85 and we had a norther come in. It wasn’t supposed to hit that night, it was supposed to hit the next day. That sun came up and the wind was blowing 25-30 mph. That’s not super strong but these little anchors in the situation he was in, don’t hold that well. I was okay cause I was anchored out in the Edna and could just ride it out. Randy had a crew member who had woke up and he was at the wheel of the Prowler, he was paying attention. He radioed that they were fine. Thirty minutes to an hour later I hear my brother Randy come on the radio screaming. The crew member, after he said they were fine, went back to bed! The Prowlerwas about two hundred tons of boat not counting the fuel. The wind caught it and pushed it up on the jetty and messed his rudder up, once you mess up the rudder and the wheel, that’s it, you’re not moving. It knocked a couple holes in it and the boat went down,” said Bill softly. The coast guard came out and rescued the crew. The Glass family of Oak Island had a bulk heading company at the time, and they went out there after it had calmed down, welded the hatches shut, put a hose in and pumped air into the boat, pushing the water out and floated it up. Randy had insurance on the boat but it took a year to restore it.”