Yacht lost on Shingles

Its the old boiler and its damn close to the Needles LH and on a very shallow reef, does'nt bother most people

Speaking of 'old boilers', Jimi, good evening to you.

The wremnants of the wreck of the SS Varvassi, carrying a cargo of tangerines, remain on the seabed around the shallow reef that is part of the underwater extension of The Needles.

Their main claim to continued fame these days lies in their powerful magnetic attraction for expensive, Round-The-Island-type, expensively-navigated racing yotts. One of the great Southern England spectator sports is to gather on the cliff-tops and in adjacent waters, on RNLI lifeboats and in media-throng helicopters, to watch the monstrous 1500-plus fleet that is the RTIR swirl down the Needles Channel, last half of the ebb-tide under 'em, no way back, and see a bundle, a 'cluster', of 'em run hard onto the old boiler that still lies wedged there.

Usually one of the leading racing yotts has first go - er, stop - to a pleased roar of approval from the excited crowd, graunching, lurching, heeling to a halt. Within minutes, others have run hard onto the first one, unable or unwilling to steer away. The tearing sound of tortured glass layup and trooper-swearing crewmen and owners carries downwind for miles....

....every year.

As for the other side of the Needles Channel, where lies the Shingles Bank, there lies is a classic and very well-reported trap for unwary yotties of varying flavours ( wee racer, big racer, topsail and yard types, mo-beasties ). One needs to picture the pent-up volume of water squeezing down out of the west Solent, past Hurst and down the relatively narrow Needles Channel.

Some of it spills west into North Channel, some more recycles as an eddy on the eastern side and feeds back into the main, powerful ebb-stream. Further down, this stream is constricted and constrained from achieving full potential speed by the relatively shallow underwater 'road block' ahead of it that is The Bridge. That 'back-pressure' causes some of the water, thousands of tons of it, to be squeezed sideways. It cannot escape effectively to the east, 'cos there are sticky-up white chalk obstructions there, so it squirts sideways to the west - right over The Shingles bank.

As the covered depth decreases on the lower half of the ebb, the surface water going there from the western third of the main channel runs much faster, and anything floating there - in the western third of the main ebbstream - is set hard towards the hazard.

The process is fairly fundamental. So also is the 'avoidance' remedy.

:)
 
As I am the skipper of Rio Rib I thought you might like to hear first hand what happened:

The yacht blu argent called a Mayday, and after the first vessel was unable to help, I offered assistance. You could see the keel of the yacht embedded into the shingle bank and they were taking on water. We provided lat and long for the CG and other status info, and tried to go in to assist, but I could only get within about 10 metres due to the depth - it was about 1-1.7 metres with a lot of wave swell and did not wish to risk grounding myself, especially as I had two yound children on board (their first time on the RIB !). CG rescue helicopter 104 arrived with the Yarmouth Lifeboat, who laucnhed their Y boat, due to the depth being too shallow for the ALB. 104 collected two casualities as the yacht began to break up and sink, and the Y boat rescued one casualty, transferred her to our RIB, and then colletced the second casualty. The Y Boat and ourselves then met the ALB and transferred casualties.

Its very easy for anyone to get caught out at sea, and I am just plased we were able to assist.

A very well done to you! I hope you ,or somebody like you,is around if I get caught out!
As we all can be(except the armchair experts on here!)
 
Thank you, RioRib, for your first hand account and for adding some facts to the thread. And welcome to the forum.
 
As I am the skipper of Rio Rib I thought you might like to hear first hand what happened:

The yacht blu argent called a Mayday, and after the first vessel was unable to help, I offered assistance. You could see the keel of the yacht embedded into the shingle bank and they were taking on water. We provided lat and long for the CG and other status info, and tried to go in to assist, but I could only get within about 10 metres due to the depth - it was about 1-1.7 metres with a lot of wave swell and did not wish to risk grounding myself, especially as I had two yound children on board (their first time on the RIB !). CG rescue helicopter 104 arrived with the Yarmouth Lifeboat, who laucnhed their Y boat, due to the depth being too shallow for the ALB. 104 collected two casualities as the yacht began to break up and sink, and the Y boat rescued one casualty, transferred her to our RIB, and then colletced the second casualty. The Y Boat and ourselves then met the ALB and transferred casualties.

Its very easy for anyone to get caught out at sea, and I am just plased we were able to assist.

Thanks for letting us know, and well done for being as useful as you could possibly be.
After all the conjecture and finger pointing, your post seems to have gone unnoticed. :confused:
 
Varvassi, and it only annoys those cutting the corner on the RTIR.

Otherwise there's nothing shallow enough to embarrass a small boat south of the Shingles.

I think the Goose Rock Old Boy's Association might challenge that latter statement?

RTIR can be scary. The time honoured advice for judging distance off is pretty useless when there are so many yachts between you and the lighthouse that you cannot see the island, let alone the old CG lookout. Then the boat next to you hits goose rock and pivots on its keel into your path. Meanwhile the current takes you straight across the Varvassi, as you lose all power in the lee of the J120 fleet. Almost worth getting up at 4am for!
 
use the North Channel is an option

If you are likely to run aground in the Needles Channel, your chances in the North Channel are no better, although the North Channel gives you a better angle for hitting Christchurch Ledge. It's the real world out there!
 
Well done Rio

Great first hand account of the rescue operation Rio well done its nice to know the Great British Boating Public are always willing to help .
Not the best of places for a grounding and I certainly agree that its a very dangerous area especially on the Ebb Spring tide and a SW swell talk about running the rapids !!
It makes us all think how important sheltered little anchorages are on the South Coast when things get rough .. Studland South Bay comes to mind and even thats under threat from people who have no idea of the dangers sea goers face off our coast .
 
Great first hand account of the rescue operation Rio well done its nice to know the Great British Boating Public are always willing to help .
Not the best of places for a grounding and I certainly agree that its a very dangerous area especially on the Ebb Spring tide and a SW swell talk about running the rapids !!
It makes us all think how important sheltered little anchorages are on the South Coast when things get rough .. Studland South Bay comes to mind and even thats under threat from people who have no idea of the dangers sea goers face off our coast .

Studlands -Anchor due to press of weather
 
I must admit to losing my engine in light wind in a very similar position. My wife was helming with no wind while I was below working on the engine. I had to ask for a tow in the end as I was travelling at 5knots very near the bank, with no chance of getting the anchor down. There for the grace of God go I.
 
RioRib, thanks for the info and please accept a hugely deserved HUZZAH! for your excellent actions. May your winds be favourable and your tides be fair (yes, I know you're a Mobo but I don't know any motorised blessings!). Oh, and welcome to this den of iniquity - grab a beer, pull up a chair and enjoy!
 
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