Fully Insured
Fully Insured
Insurance
companies are normally willing to insure anything. Ensuring public or private
property is a standard practice in most countries in the world. If, however,
you were holding an open-air garden party or a fete it would be equally
possible to insure yourself in the event of bad weather. Needless to say, the
bigger the risk an insurance company takes, the higher the premium you will
have to pay. It is not uncommon to hear that a shipping company has made a
claim for the cost of salvaging a sunken ship. But the claim made by a local
authority to recover the cost of salvaging a sunken pie dish must surely be
unique.
Admittedly
it was an unusual pie dish, for it was eighteen feet long and six feet wide. It
had been purchased by a local authority so that an enormous pie could be baked
for an annual fair. The pie committee decided that the best way to transport
the dish would be by the canal, so they insured it for the trip. Shortly after it
was launched, the pie committee went to a local inn to celebrate. At the same
time, a number of teenagers climbed on to the dish and held a little party of
their own. Dancing proved to be more than the dish could bear, for during the
party it capsized and sank in seven feet of water.
The pie
committee telephoned a local garage owner who arrived in a recovery truck to
salvage the pie dish. Shivering in their wet clothes, the teenagers looked on
while three men dived repeatedly into the water to locate the dish. They had
little difficulty in finding it, but hauling it out of the water proved to be a
serious problem. The sides of the dish were so smooth that it was almost
impossible to attach hawsers and chains to the rim without damaging it.
Eventually, chains were fixed to one end of the dish, and a powerful winch was
put into operation. The dish rose to the surface and was gently drawn towards
the canal bank. For one agonizing moment, the dish was perched precariously on
the bank of the canal, but it suddenly overbalanced and slid back into the
water. The men were now obliged to try once more. This time they fixed heavy
metal clamps to both sides of the dish so that they could fasten the chains.
The dish now had to be lifted vertically because one edge was resting against
the side of the canal. The winch was again put into operation and one of the men
started up the truck. Several minutes later, the dish was again put into
operation and one of the water. Water streamed in torrents over its sides with
such force that it set up a huge wave in the canal. There was a danger that the
wave would rebound off the other side of the bank and send the dish plunging
into the water again. By working at tremendous speed, the men managed to get
the dish on to dry land before the wave returned.
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