When I first dipped my toes into inland navigation, I once embarked on a few zig-zagging trips aboard the local country boat ferries, known as “Bhutbhuti,” on the Brahmaputra in Guwahati. After my earlier failed attempts to engage with country boat operators and nearly getting tossed out by hostile crews, I took a different approach. I played the role of a clueless NRI( Indian residing abroad), out on a nostalgia trip in my hometown. With a big, stupid grin, obsessively clicking everything with my mobile, I asked the most naive questions, looking every bit like a harmless tourist.
 
 
A new government subsidized marine engine in a Country Boat Ferry,
but it still doesn't plug the leaks  
What I saw on those trips wasn't eye-opening as I had seen it all before. The boats were all flooded up to the floorboards. Their propeller shafts, connected to old lorry engines serving as power plants, were so poorly sealed, that they practically poured water into the hull. When I innocently asked, “Why not pump the water out?” I got a surprising answer: “The water toughens up the wood!”
The reality, of course, is 
quite the opposite. Constant exposure to water rots the wood, and that's
 why these boats crumble like matchsticks in every riverboat accident. 
These boats are made with reverse clinker hull constructions, where 
planks are nailed atop one another with an overlap, and the gaps are 
filled with rope and tar. Keeping the wood damp is part of their sealing
 process — the wood swells, closing the gaps. However, these boats leak 
at virtually every joint due to poor craftsmanship. But, it took me 
another half-decade of working in this field to understand why they keep
 their boats flooded. Most of the reasons are unknown even to the 
operators themselves.
1. Their design 
is inherently flawed, making the boats unstable. The water load inside 
acts as ballast, somewhat improving stability. But it comes at a huge 
cost — increasing the boat's weight, reducing speed, lowering the 
waterline, and making them prone to capsizing as the water inside shifts
 when the boat tilts.
2. There's a deeply ingrained 
belief that a heavier boat is a more stable and safer boat, a belief 
that has persisted for centuries. This thinking has even carried over to
 metal ferry builders and many naval architects. The result? It's not 
only the Country Boats, but inefficient steel monstrosities, consuming 
insane amounts of fuel, that continue to dominate our waterways for 
decades.
 
Water up to the floor boards, a characteristic
of all wooden country boat ferries.
