Abandoned yacht found

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Friday 17th November

31deg 10'.01 N
16deg 27'.86W

100 miles South of Madeira, 85 miles from Islas Selvagem, 180 miles from Santa Cruz de Tenerife

At about three o' clock in the afternoon Kathy spotted what she thought was a small fishing boat - the first vessel we had seen all day. Looking through the binoculars it appeared to be a yacht with no mast, so we turned to investigate. It was indeed a drifting, dismasted yacht. There was a small sail hanging over the bow, the stern fittings looked a bit mangled and it was pretty obvious that she had been rolled and lost her mast. The washboards were out and the hatch open, but no sign of anyone on board. We circled round as close as practical - there was still a three metre swell running (which as usual is not apparent in the photograph). The name was clearly visible, but the SSR number was hidden by two large fenders hanging over the port quarter, and it was only on the third or fourth time around that they rolled out of the way enough for us to get the number.

hercules.jpg


We sounded the foghorn a few times to rouse anyone who might be on board, then phoned Falmouth MRCC on the Satphone. We also phoned Quinta de Lorde marina, our point of departure, and asked the manageress to get in touch with the Madeiran authorities as we had been unable to reach the number given in the pilot. Tryng to put a crew member on board was a last option in those seas, only to be considered if it was a recent disaster and there might be crew on board.

The yacht was the Hercules, SSR41232. Falmouth phoned us back to let us know that she had been successfully abandoned by her crew after the dismasting six weeks previously. I phoned Katya back and she told us that the Portuguese authorities had confirmed the yacht as abandoned and that she was ours if we wanted her. It was so tempting . . . but we could see no way to board her safely in the prevailing swell conditions without risking serious damage to Fairwinds, so reluctantly we put aside any thoughts of salvage and left the eerie vessel to continue drifting. The fact that she was still afloat after six weeks with the washboards out was remarkable, but somewhat worrying - a close encounter at night would not be good. Discussion as to whether or not we should have attempted salvage continued into the night, but I think we did the right thing. Had she been a more valuable prize we might have risked it, but 180 miles is a long tow with a small yacht in big seas. Altogether a remarkable and spooky oceanic encounter.

Does anyone know the story of what happened and why the yacht was abandoned?

- Nick
 
Goodness me, what a find, you are blessed.

The best we saw was a pub table and bench thingy.......500 miles from nowhere, its probably adorning a Caribbean bar now.
 
Very freaky . . .

I offered Charlie, our crew for this leg, the dinghy to try to go aboard, but in view of the absence of boarding ladder or any other way of actually getting onto the Hrcules, the high freeboard and the heavy pitching he wisely declined. Taking Fairwinds alongside was never an option - there would definietely have been damage to the topsides. The only option wold have been passing close alongside and jumping.

Now, if it had been a 42ft HR or something similar I might have risked it . . .

- Nick
 
I suspect a Sadler 34 by the transom the 32 s are pinched! nice boat I lifted one out of the water last Saturday and admired its lines! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
I'd say it was a 32 not a 34. The transom does looked pinched, compared to the 34. The other point is that the 34 has a higher coach roof, carried further forward.
 
I really don't understand why people who abandon yachts don't open the seacocks as they abandon ship. Leaving a hazard to navigation is not a seamanlike course of action. I guess if one was cynical about it the fact they haven't behaved in a seamanlike way might be why they got into trouble in the first place. And what about a jury rig before getting off - the boat looks to be in reasonable nick?
 
Yes, the 26, 29 and 34 all had positive buoyancy. The 32 was conventional construction.

The fact that the boat is still afloat shows that despite having a hell of a time, remains undamaged enough to remain water tight.
 
Definitely a Sadler 32 (I have one). No internal buoyancy. Chilled me to the marrow when I saw the picture - but somehow reassuring to see her afloat after some catastrophe.
 
One cannot tell from your picture if the standing rigging was still attached - surely if it was, the mast and boom would still be hanging around and would have compromised the hull long ago?
 
Which appears on the ybw.com front page as

"Salvage attempt of derilect yacht abandoned"

I'm still spinning!
 
[ QUOTE ]
Faced with abandoning a yacht, in what I presume were pretty atrocious conditions, with standing rigging strewn all over the place, I'm not sure that I would have the courage to open sea cocks and risk entanglement.

[/ QUOTE ]
I certainly see your point but the boat wasn't even sinking, indeed it seems to be floating on its marks, with little if any water ingress. If it was safe enough to get off surely it was safe enough to open at least one seacock.

What I really don't understand is why did they get off a boat that wasn't sinking? It seems to happen quite often.
 
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