Lake St. Clair Boaters Cruise Toward World Record
More Than 1,600 Boats Tie Together, According To Organizers
POSTED: Monday, August 15, 2005
Boaters lined up their vessels in Lake St. Clair this weekend in an effort to set a world record for the most boats rafted together at one time on a fresh water lake.
More than 1,600 boats came together in Muscamoot Bay on Saturday for the second annual Lake St. Clair Raft, event co-organizer Brian Elliott told the
Times Herald of Port Huron. The crowd started early with hundreds of boats already gathered before noon at the bay, which is known as a gathering spot for boats every weekend during the summer.
With a makeshift midway between the two rows of boats on a sandbar, the crowd attempted to walk through the 3- to 4-feet-deep water from end to end, a feat some said would have taken hours.
Authorities patrolled the area to ensure there were no problems, while a vendor patrolled the waters on a pontoon boat to sell hot dogs and chips to the crowd. Airplanes flew overhead to snap aerial photographs of the scene.
T-shirts commemorating the event were also sold to raise money for the Special Olympics and repairs of the South Channel Lights.
Volunteers now have to verify that all the boats that participated were registered for the event and that there was no break in the formation. Last year's record-setting attempt failed because the line was broken.
The Lake Norman Raft-Up in North Carolina holds the current record. That event linked 1,453 boats in July 2004.
Copyright 2005 by ClickOnDetroit.com.
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