The 30-foot cabin cruiser named the E-Z Goin was going pretty hard at the height of Hurricane Sandy, driven into the deeply flooded streets of Broad Channel, Queens, and sent ramming against a corner house.
âI figured it was a matter of time before it just rammed my windows in,â said the owner of the house, Mark Ott, 38, who was inside riding out the storm with his family. Mr. Ott managed to jump into the boat, get its engi nes started and run it aground near the median of Cross Bay Boulevard, where it has remained for two weeks.
âIt's become a conversation piece,â said Mr. Ott, a bus mechanic for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, who spray-painted a new name on the battered boat: the S.S. Minnow, after the wayward vessel on the popular television show âGilligan's Island.â
âI figured it would lighten people's moods,â he said while surveying the boat from his front stoop on Monday night. âOn the show, it was a three-hour tour, but I was only on board for about five minutes.â
Mr. Ott said he did not know who owned the boat, adding that it most likely broke free from a local dock or washed in from one of the nearby boatyards.
Another neighbor had scrawled a heartfelt message on the side of the boat directed at the city's Department of Sanitation, whose members have been hailed as heroes in the neighborhood for their a ggressive cleanup. Another neighbor had placed a big plywood sign on the boat saying, âBroad Channel, the Forgotten Town!â
âThere have been cops and firemen taking pictures in front of it every day,â said Mr. Ott, who like other locals considers the boat a symbol of how, in the days after the storm, little attention was paid to Broad Channel, a working-class neighborhood in the middle of Jamaica Bay whose streets were turned into raging rivers during the storm. The waters splintered houses, obliterated docks and tossed dozens of boats into the streets, many of them still untouched.
Photos of the E-Z Goin have been widely seen on social media, but the boat has not been removed. It still juts out across the shoulder and into the boulevard, blocking one of the two northbound lanes of this main route in and out of the storm-ravaged Rockaways. It has caused delays every day, despite the traffic agents stationed there to help move cars along.
On Monday mo rning, a sticker from the Sanitation Department was put on the boat declaring it âcondemned propertyâ that was âscheduled for removal.â But by Monday afternoon, someone had slopped black paint over the sticker.
âMaybe it was the owner, I don't know,â said Mr. Ott, who then recalled how on the night the storm hit, the boat floated along East 16th Road toward Cross Bay Boulevard. Part of the boat became entangled in utility lines in front of his house.
âThe wires were stretching like a rubber band,â said Mr. Ott, who was inside with his wife, their three young children and his mother, 62.
âMy mother said, âWhy don't you see if you can steer it away from here?'â He threw some tools in a plastic bag and mounted a headlamp on his head. He put on a pair of shorts and waded out through the water and pulled himself over the side of the boat.
âI figured I could hot-wire it,â said Mr. Ott, a third-generation Broad Channel resident who used to work repairing boat engines. He checked its twin inboard engines, turned the battery switch on, and followed the ignition wires, to begin his planned hot-wiring caper.
âThen I realized I didn't even have to, because the keys were in the ignition,â he said.
Both engines started easily and he gunned the boat until it came to a stop, and waded back to his house, where his basement was filled with water and an oil tank had spilled 200 gallons of its contents.
âI'm still cleaning out,â he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment