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SummerBreeze
08-08-2003, 10:06 AM
Boating accident leaves teen mouring father
Jeff DeLong
RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL
8/7/2003 10:57 pm
Charles A. Sauer Jr., his wife Janis Sauer and their two teenage children looked forward to their annual summer trip from the Bay Area to Lake Tahoe, a neighbor said.
On Thursday, the children mourned the death of their father, and their mother was still missing after a boating accident a day earlier.
“They always look so forward to it because they like Tahoe so much,” said Patricia Cauterucci, a San Carlos, Calif., resident who was watching the Sauer home across the street while they were away.
“They were very nice people. We were just talking to them Sunday,” Cauterucci said. “This is terrible, just terrible.”
Searchers today are set to continue combing the waters and shores of Lake Tahoe for Janis Sauer, 50, but acknowledged she’s likely dead and that her body might never be found.
Her husband, 53, was killed Wednesday when a rented ski boat containing his wife, two children and five other friends or family members capsized in choppy waters, authorities said Thursday.
The cause of the accident was not immediately clear, but authorities said lake was raked by up to 4-foot waves at the time.
An investigator said the 21 1/2-foot Sport Nautique, a shallow-draft vessel loaded to maximum capacity with nine passengers, might have flipped in the high waves.
“I think it was an inexperienced operator in pretty serious storm conditions,” Fred Messmann, boating law administrator for the Nevada Division of Wildlife, which is investigating the accident.
“I think they just got caught in the waves and they took over,” Messmann said.
The couple’s two teenage children were among the seven rescued after witnesses spotted their overturned ski boat bobbing in waters off of Cave Rock, four of them clinging to the vessel’s hull and the others in the water nearby.
All but one survivor was released after treatment at Barton Memorial Hospital. The other was listed in good condition Thursday. Authorities declined to provide the names of the survivors.
All nine people were members of two Bay Area families who regularly vacationed at Lake Tahoe in the summer, sharing a house, Cauterucci, said.
Charles Sauer was employed in the computer industry and his wife is a schoolteacher, Cauterucci said.
“I can’t believe this,” she said.
Douglas County Sheriff Ron Pierini said searchers combed the waters by boat and helicopter throughout much of Thursday, but that search boats left in the afternoon when windy conditions whipped up water much like the day of the accident.
Tahoe’s shoreline also was searched along a wide band of the lake stretching roughly from the Glenbrook area south to the edge of the Stateline casino strip, Pierini said. The search is scheduled to resume this morning and continue until at least the afternoon, Pierini said.
Charles Sauer was found floating face-down and wearing a life preserver. Janis Sauer also was reported to be wearing a floatation device but that is unconfirmed, Pierini said. It’s possible that if she was wearing one, it may have come off after the accident, the sheriff said.
Authorities said first reports were received about 6:30 p.m. of the capsized boat, which left Sunnyside Marina shortly after 2 p.m. Officials said the victims may have spent several hours in the water, and several showed symptoms of hypothermia.
The group was planning a four-hour trip from Sunnyside to Emerald Bay and officials said they aren’t sure why they ended up on the other side of the lake near Cave Rock.
“It wasn’t where they were supposed to be,” said Chief Ray Holcombe of the Lake Tahoe station of the U.S. Coast Guard.
Lee Schmidt, owner of High Sierra Water Ski School, which rented the boat to the victims, also expressed surprise.
“That’s quite a ways off course,” Schmidt said. “I’m at this point not sure exactly what happened.”
Schmidt said the accident was the first of its type in his business’s 26-year history.
“It’s not good for morale, obviously,” Schmidt said. “It was just basically your all-American family coming to Tahoe to recreate. It’s a major tragedy and it’s very, very sad.”

Dribble
08-08-2003, 12:51 PM
That's a damn shame. Tahoe is a great boating lake but you have to know what your doing. When the wind comes up, it gets like the ocean out there The water temperature is about 60 degrees. Unless it's a perfectly calm day you need to stay close enough to shore to get there if something happens. I dont go out there without a phone, a working air horn and a flare gun. I've been there on warm summer weekdays and not had another boat pass within two miles for several hours. What the hell was this marina doing renting a boat (probably to inexperienced boaters)to be filled with nine people on a cool windy day???
[ August 08, 2003, 03:47 PM: Message edited by: Dribble ]

roln 20s
08-08-2003, 01:08 PM
That is horrible. My thoughts and prayers are with both families and all of their friends. That is a huge lake that is so deep. I just hope they are found to provide a little closure.
Being an owner and everyday user of a comp ski boat, I know how low profile they are and bad they are in rough water. With that much weight, the boat will sit even lower in the water and with the bows that curve down a little so that the driver can see when accelerating and going at slow speeds, its VERY easy to bring water over the bow. We can get water to come over our bow just from going to slow over our own wakeboarding wake. Definately not the easiest boat to drive and understand for the novice boater.
But either way, these are families involved, and I feel for both of them and wish them the best out of this horrible situation.
Roln 20s

Ziggy
08-08-2003, 01:53 PM
Horrible to hear any boating fatality regardless of who's(inexperienced or not) involved. Condolences to the teens and the other family involved.

SummerBreeze
08-08-2003, 01:56 PM
Not to blame anyone about this boating accident.
Hmmm If you put 9 people into a boat. This ski boat must have been an open bow type. Most ski boats of this type don't have much freeboard then put in 9 people with an average weight of 150 lbs.1350lbs full tank of gas add another 200lbs. Then add 4ft waves and cold water these people didn't have a chance.
If they left Sunnyside area and were found at Cave rock thats about 18 miles from where they should have been.
It's a bad deal.. start out all smiles got the whole family with you life is good as it could be. Then boating can turn ugly real fast.
Boating at Lake Tahoe is like no where I have ever been It's the greatest place with beauty like not many people get to see. It's here in my back yard.
Many times I have boated on the lake and I know how the weather can get. This whole week the wind has come up real hard in the afternoon. There is no way I would take myself to that lake with any boat that I have until the weather gets better and it always does but not today.
My thoughts and prayers go out to the family and loved ones.

mbrown2
08-08-2003, 02:24 PM
That's terrible news...my thoughts and condolences go out the surviving members...I cannot imagine ending a day of boating in the water holding onto your floating boat with your passengers in the water, and some missing..its dreadful...

Her454
08-08-2003, 02:57 PM
My prayers go out to the family. Its incredible a marina would rent a boat of that nature to be loaded to max capacity on a day like that, and I had NO idea Tahoe could get so rough.

Trailer Park Casanova
08-08-2003, 03:35 PM
Her454:
My prayers go out to the family. Its incredible a marina would rent a boat of that natureThat says it all gorgious.
Every boat has it's demons, and ski boats are not exempt.
Can't say thats a good class of boat to rent.
Sad indeed,, really sad.

GlastronGuy
08-08-2003, 04:00 PM
It's a shame this family had to suffer this fate. I've seen boats that were moored in 15 feet of water sink from waves crashing on them.
When I was in high school me and a friend used to paddle out from the South Shore near our homes till we were even with the casinos. According to a map we had at the time, it was 1.5 miles. We had a rubber raft that said "For Pool Use Only" on it that we bought at Western Auto. We broke the plastic paddles that came with it the first time out and had to buy wooden ones, the plastic ones didn't hold up to the waves. We'd be out there in "Small Craft Advisories" because we thought they applied to aircraft.
We'd paddle out there, light one up and let the wind push us back in. No life jackets or nothing. I shudder to think of it now but we were very lucky/stupid.

spectratoad
08-09-2003, 10:23 AM
They called off the search yesterday for the mother. Hope she surfaces soon. I know I wouldn't want to live with the idea that my loved one was never found.
Yes Tahoe can get rough. Pretty much every day the wind kicks up around 3 so I know we usually get off of whatever lake anyway if it does get windy. I feel for that family. 9 people in a boat though wasn't very smart. I think I heard on the news that it is possible that a rope ended up in the propeller and the boat wasn't running obviously.

squirt
08-10-2003, 12:53 AM
The fact that any company would rent a boat to anyone with no experience is absurd in itself! Sending one of these rentals out without a marine radio and instructions on how to use it is insane. I receintly rescued a rental boat that was fully loaded with an entire family that was being pounded on the rocks by large waves being created by a number of wake board style boats that were also rentals! Not one of them took the time to find out why this boat was so close to the rocks and why this guy was out of the boat trying to hold it from becoming fiberglass bits. I own a low profile jet....you guys ought to see what one of your wake board boat wakes look like to me! If you own one of these things just remember if crossing your own wake causes you some distress....WTF do you think we with real low profile boat are susposed to do eek!

Kilrtoy
08-10-2003, 01:02 AM
Hope she surfaces soon
I doubtit,
water too cold and deep. Sad but.......