Scuttling to safety!

Would you scuttle

  • yes

    Votes: 26 38.2%
  • no

    Votes: 42 61.8%

  • Total voters
    68
I was dismasted mid atlantic when sailing single handed from Bermuda to The Azores. Sods law, it was exactly halfway ! No engine, and only a spinnaker pole to attach some jury rig to. I drifted around for 8 days before rescue ( no epirb ). Tried the sailing bit, averaged about 15 miles a day max. Did all the calculations regarding food, water etc. and came to the conclusion that there was no way I could make it on my own. I was all prepared to abandon the boat and was going to open all the seacocks to sink her when along came an Indian containership and they lifted me and the boat onto the deck with the crane !! Was then taken to Rotterdam !
Anyway, point of story, boat was afloat and not taking in water but I still made the descision to abandon. It was not insured by the way.

Now that is a cool story!
 
I answered yes because that's what I'd do but unless the boat was sinking under me I'd be unlikely to abandon. Too many people have been too quick to abandon, often to their detriment.
Kilters and Jimis subsequent endorsement echo my way of thinking. I'd stay with my boat with the liferaft inflated alongside until she was ready to sink. There's be need to scupper her, she'd either sink naturally or I'd still be on board looking for ways to plug any leaks or whatever.

I suppose it depends on the design of the boat and the medical/psychologigal strengths and weknesses of the crew but I like to believe the loss of a rudder on any boat I sail wouldn't present more than a possibly serious inconvenience/delay. That said, I read somewhere of a boat with a jammed rudder who was lifted off (I think) after 3 months of sailing in circles. I think after that length of time I might throw the towel in too and accept a lift if one was offerred!

Cheers, Brian.
 
I was dismasted mid atlantic when sailing single handed from Bermuda to The Azores. Sods law, it was exactly halfway ! No engine, and only a spinnaker pole to attach some jury rig to. I drifted around for 8 days before rescue ( no epirb ). Tried the sailing bit, averaged about 15 miles a day max. Did all the calculations regarding food, water etc. and came to the conclusion that there was no way I could make it on my own. I was all prepared to abandon the boat and was going to open all the seacocks to sink her when along came an Indian containership and they lifted me and the boat onto the deck with the crane !! Was then taken to Rotterdam !
Anyway, point of story, boat was afloat and not taking in water but I still made the descision to abandon. It was not insured by the way.

Chris

So you decided you were going to abandon your boat, and presumably get into a liferaft?. In what way were you going to be any better off? :confused:
 
So you decided you were going to abandon your boat, and presumably get into a liferaft?. In what way were you going to be any better off? :confused:

Sorry, you've missed the point or I didn't explain it well. I was going to abandon the boat when help arrived. In fact when the ship that rescued me answered the radio call he was initially going to pick me up with the ships lifeboat. He then decided to try and lift me out of the water.

Chris
 
Im not sure. Doubt it makes a great deal of difference. I have seen a half submerged boat in midatlantic and a lot of other flotsam too. I am certain I wouldnt have seen it at night running at 7 knots in waves in time to do anything. Nor do I think that I would see an unlit yacht dismasted unless it was a very clear night. Having said that the odds against hitting anything are high and I doubt willbe significantly altered by one or two yachts floating about for 8 months or so. So I think decide at the time whats feels best and do that.And if i can i will ask the insurance company first
 
Have you got headlights on your boat?

Not keeping a proper lookout.

But what's all this about a mostly submerged yacht? They either float or sink (unless an Etap or similar).

Of course, all multihulls should be sunk, whether abandoned or not.:rolleyes:

There is no way you would see an unlit yacht with no sails hoisted on a cloudy pitch-dark night at sea in time to avoid hitting it. You would however be extremely unlucky to do so - it is a big ocean out there.

BishopT
 
I was dismasted mid atlantic when sailing single handed from Bermuda to The Azores. Sods law, it was exactly halfway ! No engine, and only a spinnaker pole to attach some jury rig to. I drifted around for 8 days before rescue ( no epirb ). Tried the sailing bit, averaged about 15 miles a day max. Did all the calculations regarding food, water etc. and came to the conclusion that there was no way I could make it on my own. I was all prepared to abandon the boat and was going to open all the seacocks to sink her when along came an Indian containership and they lifted me and the boat onto the deck with the crane !! Was then taken to Rotterdam !
Anyway, point of story, boat was afloat and not taking in water but I still made the descision to abandon. It was not insured by the way.

Chris

Chris,

That sounds like a really interesting story. Is it written up anywhere?

Nick
 
Here are some details about the latest (?) ARC casualty 'Pelican' that has been abandoned after losing her rig :
http://www.pbo.co.uk/news/433224/arc-crew-evacuated-from-yacht

Hopefully she will drift across 'under her own steam' now, and folk in the Caribbean might intercept her before she piles up on a reef like what First Light did a few years ago here in Barbados.
(more details of this at http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=111396& - there is still a large section of her hull on the beach a few miles south of where she came ashore)

Or maybe somebody else sailing along will see Pelican and do a bit of salvage, and perhaps take her in tow to the other side.

I would like to think that I would only abandon a boat when I had to climb up off the boat into the liferaft (or the rescue craft).
If she is floating, and drifting, I would make every effort to ration food and water as required (and do a bit of fishing and catching rain) and stay with her, especially if she is in the tradewinds.
First Light drifted approx 800 miles in 4 weeks (at just over 1 knot on average) before she 'arrived' in Barbados.

To everybody who jumps on the band wagon of the abandoned boat being a hazard to navigation, please remember that there is an awful lot of rubbish floating about out there.
Including substantial trees and containers that have jumped off ships.

If you are planning an Atlantic passage, with the outlook that you would happily scuttle your vessel if you decided to abandon her in mid Atlantic (lets hope this never happens), and you are worried about the boat being a hazard to navigation, why not ensure that you have a solar panel capable of putting in enough amps to keep an all round white light burning?
Then you could just abandon her happily, and hope that somebody else will manage to salvage her.

We nearly ran down a yacht in mid Atlantic on a very dark night - we were both sailing downwind on similar courses, and we gradually caught them up.
They had no lights on (we had a tricolour on), and no crew replied when we shouted at them as we quickly 'swerved' just before we hit them.
 
Last edited:
why?

Would you scuttle you yacht if you decided to abandon mid - Atlantic?
I cannot understand why anyone would Abandon a boat which was not sinking unless it was on fire, if it was left During a rescue, and it could not be towed, then possibly a securitee message would alert other vessels. Containers etc, washed from decks of cargo vessels pose much more of a problem keep a good lookout! I would be very unlikly to scuttle.
 
Chris,

That sounds like a really interesting story. Is it written up anywhere?

Nick

Apologies for the delay in replying, been away for a few days. I am actually typing it up at the moment from the log book. ( My handwriting is appalling ! ). All my friends say I should have published it somewhere but I just never got round to it.

To the posters who say they would not have abandoned..
The decision I took to abandon was not taken lightly. It's very easy to make a hypothetical case for not doing so, just try drifting for 8 days and seeing ships pass within a mile of you without seeing your flares, or sailing for 2 days and making 16 miles easting, then the wind died and the current pushes you back to within a mile of your starting point ! A generator failure and much much worse..not enough gin !!

Chris
 
Top