Missing French yacht L’Actuel, how it ended.

Dyflin

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Like myself and others, you may have heard the recent CG broadcast requests for anyone with information about the L’Actuel to report any sightings. Here is how the story ends.

Sail-World.com News
Mystery yacht found floating without crew
10:26 AM Tue 23 Jun 2009 GMT

Alt_L%27Actuel%20found%20drifting%20without%20crew.jpg


'L’Actuel found drifting without crew' .
There was just a light breeze by the time the Belgian yacht Genesis spotted the white-hulled sailboat adrift in the middle of the Atlantic.

The drifting boat, a French vessel named L'Actuel, was upright, the mainsail still on the mast. The headsail was torn and partly furled. Lines trailed in the water.

There was no one aboard, and the satellite phone and survival gear had been left behind.

The discovery of the empty yacht on Sunday, hundreds of kilometres from the nearest landfall, leaves a mystery about the fate of its crew, two French sailing enthusiasts, who had left Newfoundland on May 24.

'There was no signs of anybody on board. ... Anything could have happened,' said Jeri Grychowski, a spokeswoman for the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Halifax.

Search operations will continue, said a duty officer at the Gris-Nez Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centre in France.

The skipper, a veteran regatta racer named Gaétan de la Goublaye, 62, had set off from the French Caribbean island of Martinique with a friend, Denis Guilmin, 47. The two were on their way to Le Havre in Normandy.

'He's not a novice. He's very competent, very cautious. That's why I have trouble grasping what could have happened,' said a friend, Gilles Jolly, who lives next door to Mr. de la Goublaye's villa in Martinique.

Mr. Jolly noted that L'Actuel's sails were reefed, meaning that the two sailors had reduced the amount of sail exposed to the wind. The reefing, Mr. Jolly said, suggested that the two men may have been trying to keep the yacht from capsizing during a storm. Inside the boat, loose items had fallen to one side, suggesting that the 10-metre Jeanneau Sun Rise 35 had rolled.

'Was there a big wind gust? Did the boat capsize? Did he grab a buoy to go find his crewmate who had fallen in the water? We don't know,' Mr. Jolly said.

The search began when Mr. de la Goublaye's daughter, Marie, reported him missing last Thursday.

Canadian, British and French search planes scoured thousands of square kilometres of the Atlantic. On Saturday, a long-range Lockheed CP-140 Aurora from CFB Greenwood in Nova Scotia spent hours looking for the French boat.

The Belgian yacht found L'Actuel about 500 kilometres west of the Azores, 1,150 kilometres southeast of the spot where Mr. de la Goublaye made his last communication.

Complicating the search was the fact that L'Actuel did not carry a satellite rescue beacon as required by law, according to a duty officer at the Delgada Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centre in the Azores.

Mr. Jolly said Mr. de la Goublaye's wife, Sylviane, had been in hospital with an unrelated illness and is too sedated to react. 'It'll be harder when she'll come home,' he said. 'This is a great tragedy,' Mr. Jolly said. 'It's very hard on us'

The last contact with the boat was on May 24, when Mr. de la Goublaye phoned Marie in France. He had left Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, off the south coast of Newfoundland. He said he wanted to stop either in Ireland or Scotland, depending on the weather.

The French Coastguard at Griz Nez received the first call reporting that the vessel was overdue and passed the information to a Joint Rescue Coordination Centre in Halifax, Canada, from where the response to the incident is being coordinated. Numerous attempts to contact the missing yacht have been made, but without success.

The search effort includes a Hercules aircraft out of Greenwood, N.S., a Nimrod out of Falmouth, England, and a plane from France. Broadcasts were made to cover mid Atlantic as well as coastal broadcasts by Clyde, Stornoway and Falmouth Coastguard and the Irish and French Coastguard.

A retired entrepreneur who ran a packing and export business in Le Havre, Mr. de la Goublaye and his wife moved to Martinique six years ago.

Mr. Guilmin and Mr. de la Goublaye had sailed together when Mr. de la Goublaye brought L'Actuel to Martinique. They had agreed to reunite should Mr. de la Goublaye want to cross the Atlantic again.

They were returning home after sailing down to the Caribbean islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique.

The skipper told family members that he might make a stop in Scotland or Ireland on the way home but there's nothing to indicate he did.


by Globe and Mail/Sail-World
 
That's a quiet and sombre reminder that 'the sea takes who it will'.

In an echo of one of the below-the-surface messages from Adlard Coles' 'Heavy Weather Sailing', not all those who set off into the blue from Falmouth and Camaret, Scillies and Santa Maria get to the other side. Sometimes there's just a silence....

/forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
 
I was en route to Campletown when Clyde CG relayed a Pan Pan about this yacht. Never thought it would have ended this way. Very sad. My thoughts to the families.
 
"That's a quiet and sombre reminder that 'the sea takes who it will'."

Aint it though.....

There but etc. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
 
I don't want to detract from this unfortunate story however:

[ QUOTE ]
Complicating the search was the fact that L'Actuel did not carry a satellite rescue beacon as required by law, according to a duty officer at the Delgada Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centre in the Azores.

[/ QUOTE ]

When, if ever, did carrying "a satellite rescue beacon" (by which I take it they mean EPIRB) become law?
 
[ QUOTE ]
"When, if ever...." etc.

[/ QUOTE ]

It's just another example of Portuguese officials 'misinterpreting the rules and regs as they go along'.

It is, of course, mandatory for large registered vessels and we can perhaps be a little forgiving of an EU official who doesn't know his SOLAS from his elbow - but not if he's impounding your yacht until his superior gets back from his mistress. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

.....Is that 'racist'?

No snit!

/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
The official evidently does not understand the fact that if the unfortunate crew were lost overboard in a capsize or knockdown and the boat quickly righted itself, any epirb would still be in its holder down below, unactivated.
 
Reinforces my opinion that with recent cheap examples the only EPIRB to buy is a personal one.

Unlike many I do not condemn people who make an informed choice to sail without certain items of safety equipment as the one thing I love about sailing is its freedom and relative lack of regulations.

I also like Forums like these those that publicise often tragic events for many to speculate on but ultimately these do enable us to make better informed decisions.
 
A sobering story.

No mention of liferaft - if carried, or if onboard still. If I was abandoning in a panic after a rollover capsize, I may well take the EPIRB with me in the liferaft. But I guess that the fact that no transmissions were received implies that, as stated, there never was an EPIRB.
 
This reminds me of the sad tale of Colros 2 years ago - she was over-due on passage from Falmouth to Madeira, and was found some months later drifting off the Azores - her last log entry was when she was approx 200 miles west of Lisbon.
It is probable that David went overboard - maybe a personal EPIRB might have raised the alarm, who knows.
(Here is the thread I had started about her - http://www.ybw.com/forums/showflat.php?C...&PHPSESSID= )
 
Presumably the liferaft is included in the survival gear the report states as left behind. The absence of a liferaft, either because of deployment or because it wasn't carried, would have caused comment I reckon.
 
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