Wow - boat looks in good nick so wonder what the full story is. A bust engine shouldn’t stop them
It would have been nice if they could have reported the position where the yacht was abandoned.
I presume that it was north of the Doldrums, as they had bad weather, in which case she should continue to drift westwards if she can stay afloat.
She might turn up out here in the Caribbean at some stage.
If the article is to be believed the otherwise perfectly seaworthy yacht was abandoned because of engine failure and a "tired" crew. It seems a terrible waste in so many ways.
Maybe they then started drinking salt water, went mad and forgot what the sails were for.If they were relying on the engine to run a watermaker then I could believe that engine failure could scupper their passage plans.
I thought speculation was exactly what threads like this are for ....Maybe they then started drinking salt water, went mad and forgot what the sails were for.
These threads are fun, but speculating on what happened from a single news story that was about the rescue ship rather than the yacht is slightly daft.
It would have been nice if they could have reported the position where the yacht was abandoned.
I presume that it was north of the Doldrums, as they had bad weather, in which case she should continue to drift westwards if she can stay afloat.
She might turn up out here in the Caribbean at some stage.
A J 40 'First Light' washed up on the beach here 14 years ago - she had been abandoned a few hundred miles east of Barbados. If they had made it known that a yacht was drifting out there, I know various fishing boats here that would have been keen to go out and look for her.
I posted this on YBW about her back then :
'First Light' ashore at Barbados
For our rib there is no other sensible place and was there all the way down to the Canaries with 3 quick release straps as it could be useful along with the liferaft. We’ve had it in 45 knot winds and horrible waves (not at the same time) and it hasn’t shifted at sea noticeably in 10 years.Is having your inflatable on deck a good idea 1600 miles off?
Sadly your the photos from your post from 13 years ago are suffering from the curse of photobucket.
Could be a good thing. I might find the sight of a wrecked J-boat distressing.
As to the subject of the original post, I'd be most interested to know more detail. One would hope that there's more to the story; engine broken down and crew feeling a bit tired seem pretty thin reasons for abandoning ship.
Is having your inflatable on deck a good idea 1600 miles off?
After listening to a talk about another rescue, they should have sunk the yacht as it will now become a hazard to shipping.
No, they do it by cutting the hose below your galley sink or heads, but as close as possible to the through hull fitting. Gunfire can cause explosions eg if it hits your outboard fuel jerry can. Can't remember where I read this, sorry.I believe that's SOP with the USCGS. They rescue people but never salvage vessels, so if you don't or can't engage a commercial towing service they'll take you off and then sink your boat with gunfire.