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Kosmos in trouble--Part 1 of 3--Long

GK
Georgs Kolesnikovs
Thu, Nov 27, 2008 5:22 AM

Kosmos is a Nordhavn 43 owned and operated by
Eric and Christi Grab that is two-thirds of the
way around the world. In Italy, they have just
experience the scariest night of their lives.

Their website is not working properly so I'll
reproduce their story here, but do try the link.

--Georgs

http://kosmos.liveflux.net/blog/2008/11/25/volcanoes-boats-in-danger-and-emer
gency-rescues-part-1-of-3/

Volcanoes, Boats in
Danger, and Emergency
Rescues - Part 1 of 3

Preface: This blog story
is of the scariest night
of Christi and Eric s
lives. Tai leads a far
more adventurous life
than us, but it was
still high on his list
of scary events. This is
one of those truth is
stranger than fiction
stories, but we swear
every word of it is
true. This is by far the
longest story we have
ever written on the
blog. As we usually do
for exceptionally long
stories, we have broken
it up into multiple
parts. Normally, we like
to keep each post 2
pages or less, and we
have never had a post
longer than 3 pages.
Until now. This story is
so long that we have
broken it into three 4
1/2 page posts. If you
didn t read the last two
posts, you probably
should before reading
this one since there is
some useful background
info in them. And we
know, weather reports
are not always accurate,
and just because a bunch
of other boats stay
someplace does not make
it safe &Also this is a
good time to remind
people the blog is not
in real time. This event
has happened in the
past. See About this
Blog.

So, yesterday we wake up
to rocky seas. We were
rolling like crazy,
worse than being at sea.
The water was a bit too
shallow to deploy the
paravanes. The rough
seas were weird because
it wasn t windy and it
looked like a pretty
nice day. We were also
bummed when we realized
that the entire boat was
covered in a fine black
sand. We were afraid
that it wouldn t come
off very easily, just as
the sand from Tunisia
hadn t. Oh well, we ll
worry about it when we
get to Rome.

We were desperate to get
off the boat and get to
dry land. As we were
getting ready to go, Tai
said  Hey, do you know
what the name of the
town here is? Scari!
Oooo, scary! Ha! Ha! Ha!
 As we were almost
ready to walk out the
door, a speed boat pulls
up alongside us and
hands us a bill for the
mooring. $75.00 USD. We
were speechless. This
had to be a mistake.
Mooring balls normally
cost around $5 - $10 USD
a night, if they charge
at all, which they
usually don t. The
marina in Tripani was
$52.50 USD a night, and
the marina included lots
of amenities. We were
boiling mad about the
outrageous fee. The
11-12 boats there really
added up to some money.

We hopped in the dinghy
and went to the pier,
tying the dinghy up like
we did yesterday. We
headed up the steep,
narrow road to the town
square, where the hiking
center is located, and
signed up for a tour.
Tai decided he may as
well go, despite the
fact that he knew he d
be in a lot of pain. The
lady told us there was a
possibility that today s
hike could be cancelled
due to inclement
weather, and that they d
let us know at 1530, the
appointed meeting time.
We were surprised when
she said that there
might be bad weather,
because the forecast we
had gotten two days ago
had predicted fabulous
weather. We figured it
would probably be
another quickie squall,
like yesterday.

Then Eric went to the
company that maintains
the moorings. He asked
to see their fee
schedule. He was right.
There was a mistake. We
should have been charged
$82.50 USD per night.
Fortunately, they
honored the $75 USD we
had previously been
quoted.

It was now 1000. There
was nothing at all to do
in town. Nothing. We
weren t about to go back
to Kosmos. We could see
she was still rocking
like crazy. So, we sat
in a restaurant for a
couple hours, moved to
another one for a couple
more hours, and then
another until 1530
finally came. Talk about
a long, boring day. We
did a lot of ranting
about the audacity to
charge so much money for
a mooring to start with,
especially when it is by
far the most difficult
mooring we have ever
attempted to tie to.

It had started to rain
at 1400. The rain was
light and intermittent,
and we figured it would
pass quickly, just like
yesterday. At 1530, they
said the hike would go
on. Good stuff. See, it
would pass quickly. We
could clearly see the
peak of the volcano and
the steady stream of
dark smoke spewing from
the crater. With no
cloud cover, it would be
spectacular. We followed
our guide, Mario, up the
steep trail. He
maintained a fast clip,
with only three rest
stops planned for the
whole 900+ meter (about
2800 feet) ascent. There
were a couple people who
were lagging behind the
group and Mario made
them turn around. With
the slower two gone,
Christi was now the
slowest person in the
group, and the group had
to make a couple stops
to wait for her. Mario
made it clear he was
very unhappy about the
stops and kept yelling
at her to go faster. It
was still raining
lightly and the higher
we went, the stronger
the wind got, but the
rain and cool wind was a
welcome relief. We were
incredibly hot and
sweaty from the
strenuous climb.

At the half way mark,
Mario pulled Christi
aside and told her she
had to turn around and
go back down since she
was just too slow.
Christi was shocked. She
doesn t breathe very
well, so she is usually
is one of the slower
people on a steep climb,
but she doesn t normally
lag too far behind the
rest of the group. In
fact, like today, there
is usually someone out
of shape lagging even
farther behind her. She
has never in her life
been told she had to
turn around because of
being too slow. She was
bitterly disappointed
about not seeing the
volcano, especially
considering we were
halfway there, and more
importantly, her pride
had been bruised. She
promised to keep up and
begged a little, and
Mario finally relented.
In retrospect, it had
been yet another of the
many little signs from
God that we had ignored
all day.

Christi did manage to
stick with the group
almost the rest of the
way up, but near the
very top she petered
out. Mario went
ballistic, yelling and
screaming to get up to
the peak ASAP. We were
crushed when we saw that
the crater was
completely enveloped in
a cloud and that no lava
at all was visible. It
was freezing cold and
the wind was screaming.
Being sopping wet from
sweat and rain, we
instantly turned into
popsicles when we
stopped moving. We sat
up there for a long,
long, long time waiting
for the cloud cover to
lift. A few times we saw
some blotches of red
behind the haze. We
could hear the rumbling,
but even the rumble of
the volcano was muffled
by the screaming wind
and was not remotely as
powerful as the rumble
at Tanna. A few people
begged and pleaded with
Mario to take us back
down the trail. And he
did take us back a
little earlier than
scheduled, but refused
to leave until the sky
was completely black.

While on the mountain
top, we chatted with
Mario some. He is a cool
guy when he is  off duty
, but quite militant
on duty . We found out
that the reason he
wouldn t slow down was
because he was afraid of
lightening and we were
vulnerable on the side
of the mountain. His
words should have
instilled fear in our
hearts, but the impact
of what he was saying
didn t register.

We finally headed out,
taking a different trail
down. Mario told us at
least 20 times that we
were not allowed to stop
to empty sand out of our
shoes. The trail was
very steep, very soft
sand. With each step you
sink and slide, just
like walking down a sand
dune, quite similar to
walking down a mountain
right after a fresh,
powdery snowfall. It was
a lot of fun. Remember,
it was cloudy, so there
was no moon or stars in
the sky to help light
the way. The fact that
it was pitch black and
our only light was from
flashlights added to the
excitement. As steep as
the trail was, it was
virtually impossible to
hurt yourself since the
sand would completely
absorb and cushion you
if you fell. Tai s knees
had been aching from the
hike up and the soft
sand was a welcome
reprieve. With each step
we also got warmer and
warmer, a combination of
body heat from moving
and the wind not being
as cold as it was higher
up.

At one point, Christi
stopped to tie her shows
and Mario again went
crazy, screaming at her
to forget her laces and
MOVE MOVE MOVE. At the
half way mark, where the
vegetation line was, the
trail became narrow and
rocky. Falling was now
more of a concern. The
sand also became
progressively more hard
packed the farther down
we got. Tai s knees were
seriously starting to
hurt. Nearer to the
bottom, Mario explained
that the storm was still
on top of us and we had
to get down ASAP because
we were sitting ducks in
the exposed area of the
volcano. That is when we
registered the wind. We
had thought nothing of
the fact that the wind
had become increasingly
intense on our hike up.
Wind is usually stronger
at higher altitudes.
But, it hadn t let up as
we had made our way
down, and was still
screaming. Uh oh.

Back in the town square,
Eric looked over at the
boats. Of course it was
pitch black and all he
could see were the
anchor lights of the
various sailboats that
were there. Kosmos didn
t look quite right, but
it was hard to tell with
the perspective of the
other anchor lights. As
we got closer to shore
we gasped as we saw the
seas were huge and
tumultuous. We were
terrified that the
dinghy had been smashed
to pieces against the
pier by the big waves.
The wind was coming from
the wrong direction. In
prevailing winds, Kosmos
was more sheltered by
the island. But the wind
was coming from the
opposite direction. We
kept repeating,  How
could we be so stupid!?!
 Why did we leave the
boat so long and
underestimate the
magnitude of the weather
from previous forecasts?
No time to lament &

We hustled down the road
to the pier. We were all
tired and hungry after
hiking the 920 meter
volcano. We were
relieved to see the
dinghy lying on the sand
next to the pier. Thank
God. The waves were
literally crashing over
the top of the 6 foot
pier, and Kosmopolitan
for sure would have been
crushed had someone not
brought her in for us.
Thank you very much,
whoever you are! You
cannot even imagine how
much we appreciate your
thoughtfulness.

However, there was no
way in hell we could do
a beach launch into such
big waves. Our rigid
dinghy would fill with
water, and while it
would still float, it
wouldn t move with the
weight of the water
inside it. Only a rubber
inflatable could make
it. We noticed yesterday
that the restaurant/bar
that we had lunch in was
kind of the local s
hangout. Eric and
Christi went there to
look for help. We asked
if someone would take us
to Kosmos. No one was
willing to launch their
boats into the dangerous
waves. The guys from the
dive shop were there.
Eric asked if they had a
radio. They did and let
Eric use their radio to
call the sailboats on
the moorings around us.
None of the sailboats
responded. The winds
were coming from the
southeast at 20 -25
knots. The waves were 2+
meters (6+ feet) in
rapid intervals. It was
about 2045 at this point
in time, once again
pitch-black. There was
cloud cover and there
was no moon.

Eric and Christi gave up
on finding a ride and
frantically ran down the
shore to see if Kosmos
was OK. We were sick to
our stomachs when we saw
her. She was bucking
more violently than we
had ever seen before.
The line holding us onto
the mooring had to be
chaffing every second
and it wouldn t be long
before it broke. But
even worse, the mooring
had dragged
approximately 200 feet
down the shore, and more
importantly, much closer
to shore than when we
had left her. The ground
here is all sharp lava
rock that can do serious
damage if Kosmos  bottom
smashes into those rocks
with as much force as
she was bucking with
now. There was a very
real possibility that
the bottom was cracked
and she could be
sinking. If you are
wondering how we could
see Kosmos so well on
such a dark night, we
had left both the anchor
light and the exterior
red courtesy lights on,
we had flashlights from
the volcano hike, and
she was alarmingly close
to shore.

While Eric and Christi
were in the bar, Tai had
gone ahead of us to see
if Kosmos was OK. When
he neared her, a couple
people approached him
and said they had an
emergency with their
boat and needed help.
They were pointing at
Kosmos. Tai responded
that s our boat, not
your boat . They replied
No, the sailboat!  When
he looked more closely,
he saw there was a
sailboat bumped up
against Kosmos. The
sailboat was hard to see
because it had no
lights, which is why he
didn t immediately
notice it. It was the
sailboat moored next to
us. In the rough
conditions the line on
the sailboat s mooring
chaffed through or came
untied and the small
boat had drifted into
Kosmos. Tai said he said
he wished he could help
them, but we had our own
boat emergency to deal
with. While he watched,
the unlit sailboat
detached itself from
Kosmos and drifted out
to sea and into the
blackness of the night.

Somehow, the three of us
had missed each other on
the beach, but we all
ran back to the bar and
met up there. Eric again
desperately asked the
locals for help. Eric
even offered $750 USD
for the ride. Then a guy
approached Eric and said
he had a sailboat in
trouble and asked for
our help. At this point,
Tai hadn t had a chance
to tell Christi and Eric
about the lost sailboat
next to us, so this was
new information for the
two of them. They were
both a bit confused for
moment because of the
shared astonishment that
each of their respective
boats was in trouble.
The guy, Louis, quickly
explained his situation,
and it became clear that
each party needed to get
out to on a dinghy.
Turns out he had a
rubber dinghy with a
broken motor. We had a
motor and needed a
rubber dinghy. Eric
promised that if Louie
came to Kosmos with us,
we d take him to look
for his sailboat. It was
now about 2130.

Eric ran to our dinghy
and got the motor and
the single life vest we
keep in the dinghy, then
ran with Louis down the
beach, searching for
their dinghy. Remember,
this is a solid 
kilometer distance with
the 25 pound motor in
hand. He was tired from
the hike and starving
since he hadn t eaten
since lunch.
Fortunately, Louis took
the motor from him about
half way down the beach.
On the beach, they
couldn t find Louis s
dinghy. Louis evaluated
the situation and
decided it would be
faster and easier to
swim to Kosmos since she
was so close to shore.
Even if they did find
the dinghy, rigging the
motor would take time
and launching the dinghy
was going to be a huge
challenge. Time was of
the essence and they
needed to move. Louis
announced he was going
to swim to Kosmos. Eric
immediately said he d
swim, too. Now, you must
remember that Eric is
terrified of water where
he can t see the bottom.
It was pitch black
outside. He was too
tired and hungry to be
going for a swim in such
violent seas. But none
of that mattered. He
needed to get to Kosmos
ASAP. A local was on the
beach watching the
situation and asked if
Eric was a good swimmer.
Eric replied  Good
enough . Eric dropped
the dinghy motor in the
sand and prepared to
swim.

Louis is ex-French Navy
special forces
(equivalent to a US Navy
SEAL), so he is trained
to deal with ugly
situations like this
one. Louis handed his
boat key to Eric before
getting into the water,
and then swam out to
Kosmos, with no life
jacket or anything to
help him out should he
get hurt in the water.
Getting on the back with
no ladder out going to
be tricky since Kosmos
was bucking up and down
by at least 4 to 5 feet,
no exaggeration. It is
very hard to grab on to
the boat, and way too
easy to lose your grip
and get hit in the head
by the boat. We have
heard more than one
story of people dying
this way, including
someone on a Nordhavn.
So amazingly Louis swam
around to the mooring
line and climbed up the
mooring line onto the
front of the boat.

Once on board, Louis ran
to the back, lowered the
swim ladder, and Eric
swam out, wearing the
life vest. Eric had
happened to bring a
headlamp flashlight for
the volcano hike, which
was most fortuitous.
First of all, he had
light to see where he
was going, but more
importantly, he used the
strap of the flashlight
to hold his glasses onto
his head. If he lost his
glasses, he wouldn t
have been able to see at
all. And swimming with
only one hand as he
tried to hold his
glasses on his face with
the other would have
been hard in this water.
At one point, Eric was
feeling too tired to
swim and stopped to rest
for a couple seconds,
thankful he had the life
vest on. Eric reached
the ladder and started
climbing up. His life
vest got stuck on the
latch that holds the
ladder up and it took a
heart stopping moment
for him to get loose.

Story to be continued tomorrow

Kosmos is a Nordhavn 43 owned and operated by Eric and Christi Grab that is two-thirds of the way around the world. In Italy, they have just experience the scariest night of their lives. Their website is not working properly so I'll reproduce their story here, but do try the link. --Georgs http://kosmos.liveflux.net/blog/2008/11/25/volcanoes-boats-in-danger-and-emer gency-rescues-part-1-of-3/ Volcanoes, Boats in Danger, and Emergency Rescues - Part 1 of 3 Preface: This blog story is of the scariest night of Christi and Eric s lives. Tai leads a far more adventurous life than us, but it was still high on his list of scary events. This is one of those truth is stranger than fiction stories, but we swear every word of it is true. This is by far the longest story we have ever written on the blog. As we usually do for exceptionally long stories, we have broken it up into multiple parts. Normally, we like to keep each post 2 pages or less, and we have never had a post longer than 3 pages. Until now. This story is so long that we have broken it into three 4 1/2 page posts. If you didn t read the last two posts, you probably should before reading this one since there is some useful background info in them. And we know, weather reports are not always accurate, and just because a bunch of other boats stay someplace does not make it safe &Also this is a good time to remind people the blog is not in real time. This event has happened in the past. See About this Blog. So, yesterday we wake up to rocky seas. We were rolling like crazy, worse than being at sea. The water was a bit too shallow to deploy the paravanes. The rough seas were weird because it wasn t windy and it looked like a pretty nice day. We were also bummed when we realized that the entire boat was covered in a fine black sand. We were afraid that it wouldn t come off very easily, just as the sand from Tunisia hadn t. Oh well, we ll worry about it when we get to Rome. We were desperate to get off the boat and get to dry land. As we were getting ready to go, Tai said Hey, do you know what the name of the town here is? Scari! Oooo, scary! Ha! Ha! Ha!  As we were almost ready to walk out the door, a speed boat pulls up alongside us and hands us a bill for the mooring. $75.00 USD. We were speechless. This had to be a mistake. Mooring balls normally cost around $5 - $10 USD a night, if they charge at all, which they usually don t. The marina in Tripani was $52.50 USD a night, and the marina included lots of amenities. We were boiling mad about the outrageous fee. The 11-12 boats there really added up to some money. We hopped in the dinghy and went to the pier, tying the dinghy up like we did yesterday. We headed up the steep, narrow road to the town square, where the hiking center is located, and signed up for a tour. Tai decided he may as well go, despite the fact that he knew he d be in a lot of pain. The lady told us there was a possibility that today s hike could be cancelled due to inclement weather, and that they d let us know at 1530, the appointed meeting time. We were surprised when she said that there might be bad weather, because the forecast we had gotten two days ago had predicted fabulous weather. We figured it would probably be another quickie squall, like yesterday. Then Eric went to the company that maintains the moorings. He asked to see their fee schedule. He was right. There was a mistake. We should have been charged $82.50 USD per night. Fortunately, they honored the $75 USD we had previously been quoted. It was now 1000. There was nothing at all to do in town. Nothing. We weren t about to go back to Kosmos. We could see she was still rocking like crazy. So, we sat in a restaurant for a couple hours, moved to another one for a couple more hours, and then another until 1530 finally came. Talk about a long, boring day. We did a lot of ranting about the audacity to charge so much money for a mooring to start with, especially when it is by far the most difficult mooring we have ever attempted to tie to. It had started to rain at 1400. The rain was light and intermittent, and we figured it would pass quickly, just like yesterday. At 1530, they said the hike would go on. Good stuff. See, it would pass quickly. We could clearly see the peak of the volcano and the steady stream of dark smoke spewing from the crater. With no cloud cover, it would be spectacular. We followed our guide, Mario, up the steep trail. He maintained a fast clip, with only three rest stops planned for the whole 900+ meter (about 2800 feet) ascent. There were a couple people who were lagging behind the group and Mario made them turn around. With the slower two gone, Christi was now the slowest person in the group, and the group had to make a couple stops to wait for her. Mario made it clear he was very unhappy about the stops and kept yelling at her to go faster. It was still raining lightly and the higher we went, the stronger the wind got, but the rain and cool wind was a welcome relief. We were incredibly hot and sweaty from the strenuous climb. At the half way mark, Mario pulled Christi aside and told her she had to turn around and go back down since she was just too slow. Christi was shocked. She doesn t breathe very well, so she is usually is one of the slower people on a steep climb, but she doesn t normally lag too far behind the rest of the group. In fact, like today, there is usually someone out of shape lagging even farther behind her. She has never in her life been told she had to turn around because of being too slow. She was bitterly disappointed about not seeing the volcano, especially considering we were halfway there, and more importantly, her pride had been bruised. She promised to keep up and begged a little, and Mario finally relented. In retrospect, it had been yet another of the many little signs from God that we had ignored all day. Christi did manage to stick with the group almost the rest of the way up, but near the very top she petered out. Mario went ballistic, yelling and screaming to get up to the peak ASAP. We were crushed when we saw that the crater was completely enveloped in a cloud and that no lava at all was visible. It was freezing cold and the wind was screaming. Being sopping wet from sweat and rain, we instantly turned into popsicles when we stopped moving. We sat up there for a long, long, long time waiting for the cloud cover to lift. A few times we saw some blotches of red behind the haze. We could hear the rumbling, but even the rumble of the volcano was muffled by the screaming wind and was not remotely as powerful as the rumble at Tanna. A few people begged and pleaded with Mario to take us back down the trail. And he did take us back a little earlier than scheduled, but refused to leave until the sky was completely black. While on the mountain top, we chatted with Mario some. He is a cool guy when he is off duty , but quite militant on duty . We found out that the reason he wouldn t slow down was because he was afraid of lightening and we were vulnerable on the side of the mountain. His words should have instilled fear in our hearts, but the impact of what he was saying didn t register. We finally headed out, taking a different trail down. Mario told us at least 20 times that we were not allowed to stop to empty sand out of our shoes. The trail was very steep, very soft sand. With each step you sink and slide, just like walking down a sand dune, quite similar to walking down a mountain right after a fresh, powdery snowfall. It was a lot of fun. Remember, it was cloudy, so there was no moon or stars in the sky to help light the way. The fact that it was pitch black and our only light was from flashlights added to the excitement. As steep as the trail was, it was virtually impossible to hurt yourself since the sand would completely absorb and cushion you if you fell. Tai s knees had been aching from the hike up and the soft sand was a welcome reprieve. With each step we also got warmer and warmer, a combination of body heat from moving and the wind not being as cold as it was higher up. At one point, Christi stopped to tie her shows and Mario again went crazy, screaming at her to forget her laces and MOVE MOVE MOVE. At the half way mark, where the vegetation line was, the trail became narrow and rocky. Falling was now more of a concern. The sand also became progressively more hard packed the farther down we got. Tai s knees were seriously starting to hurt. Nearer to the bottom, Mario explained that the storm was still on top of us and we had to get down ASAP because we were sitting ducks in the exposed area of the volcano. That is when we registered the wind. We had thought nothing of the fact that the wind had become increasingly intense on our hike up. Wind is usually stronger at higher altitudes. But, it hadn t let up as we had made our way down, and was still screaming. Uh oh. Back in the town square, Eric looked over at the boats. Of course it was pitch black and all he could see were the anchor lights of the various sailboats that were there. Kosmos didn t look quite right, but it was hard to tell with the perspective of the other anchor lights. As we got closer to shore we gasped as we saw the seas were huge and tumultuous. We were terrified that the dinghy had been smashed to pieces against the pier by the big waves. The wind was coming from the wrong direction. In prevailing winds, Kosmos was more sheltered by the island. But the wind was coming from the opposite direction. We kept repeating, How could we be so stupid!?!  Why did we leave the boat so long and underestimate the magnitude of the weather from previous forecasts? No time to lament & We hustled down the road to the pier. We were all tired and hungry after hiking the 920 meter volcano. We were relieved to see the dinghy lying on the sand next to the pier. Thank God. The waves were literally crashing over the top of the 6 foot pier, and Kosmopolitan for sure would have been crushed had someone not brought her in for us. Thank you very much, whoever you are! You cannot even imagine how much we appreciate your thoughtfulness. However, there was no way in hell we could do a beach launch into such big waves. Our rigid dinghy would fill with water, and while it would still float, it wouldn t move with the weight of the water inside it. Only a rubber inflatable could make it. We noticed yesterday that the restaurant/bar that we had lunch in was kind of the local s hangout. Eric and Christi went there to look for help. We asked if someone would take us to Kosmos. No one was willing to launch their boats into the dangerous waves. The guys from the dive shop were there. Eric asked if they had a radio. They did and let Eric use their radio to call the sailboats on the moorings around us. None of the sailboats responded. The winds were coming from the southeast at 20 -25 knots. The waves were 2+ meters (6+ feet) in rapid intervals. It was about 2045 at this point in time, once again pitch-black. There was cloud cover and there was no moon. Eric and Christi gave up on finding a ride and frantically ran down the shore to see if Kosmos was OK. We were sick to our stomachs when we saw her. She was bucking more violently than we had ever seen before. The line holding us onto the mooring had to be chaffing every second and it wouldn t be long before it broke. But even worse, the mooring had dragged approximately 200 feet down the shore, and more importantly, much closer to shore than when we had left her. The ground here is all sharp lava rock that can do serious damage if Kosmos  bottom smashes into those rocks with as much force as she was bucking with now. There was a very real possibility that the bottom was cracked and she could be sinking. If you are wondering how we could see Kosmos so well on such a dark night, we had left both the anchor light and the exterior red courtesy lights on, we had flashlights from the volcano hike, and she was alarmingly close to shore. While Eric and Christi were in the bar, Tai had gone ahead of us to see if Kosmos was OK. When he neared her, a couple people approached him and said they had an emergency with their boat and needed help. They were pointing at Kosmos. Tai responded that s our boat, not your boat . They replied No, the sailboat!  When he looked more closely, he saw there was a sailboat bumped up against Kosmos. The sailboat was hard to see because it had no lights, which is why he didn t immediately notice it. It was the sailboat moored next to us. In the rough conditions the line on the sailboat s mooring chaffed through or came untied and the small boat had drifted into Kosmos. Tai said he said he wished he could help them, but we had our own boat emergency to deal with. While he watched, the unlit sailboat detached itself from Kosmos and drifted out to sea and into the blackness of the night. Somehow, the three of us had missed each other on the beach, but we all ran back to the bar and met up there. Eric again desperately asked the locals for help. Eric even offered $750 USD for the ride. Then a guy approached Eric and said he had a sailboat in trouble and asked for our help. At this point, Tai hadn t had a chance to tell Christi and Eric about the lost sailboat next to us, so this was new information for the two of them. They were both a bit confused for moment because of the shared astonishment that each of their respective boats was in trouble. The guy, Louis, quickly explained his situation, and it became clear that each party needed to get out to on a dinghy. Turns out he had a rubber dinghy with a broken motor. We had a motor and needed a rubber dinghy. Eric promised that if Louie came to Kosmos with us, we d take him to look for his sailboat. It was now about 2130. Eric ran to our dinghy and got the motor and the single life vest we keep in the dinghy, then ran with Louis down the beach, searching for their dinghy. Remember, this is a solid  kilometer distance with the 25 pound motor in hand. He was tired from the hike and starving since he hadn t eaten since lunch. Fortunately, Louis took the motor from him about half way down the beach. On the beach, they couldn t find Louis s dinghy. Louis evaluated the situation and decided it would be faster and easier to swim to Kosmos since she was so close to shore. Even if they did find the dinghy, rigging the motor would take time and launching the dinghy was going to be a huge challenge. Time was of the essence and they needed to move. Louis announced he was going to swim to Kosmos. Eric immediately said he d swim, too. Now, you must remember that Eric is terrified of water where he can t see the bottom. It was pitch black outside. He was too tired and hungry to be going for a swim in such violent seas. But none of that mattered. He needed to get to Kosmos ASAP. A local was on the beach watching the situation and asked if Eric was a good swimmer. Eric replied Good enough . Eric dropped the dinghy motor in the sand and prepared to swim. Louis is ex-French Navy special forces (equivalent to a US Navy SEAL), so he is trained to deal with ugly situations like this one. Louis handed his boat key to Eric before getting into the water, and then swam out to Kosmos, with no life jacket or anything to help him out should he get hurt in the water. Getting on the back with no ladder out going to be tricky since Kosmos was bucking up and down by at least 4 to 5 feet, no exaggeration. It is very hard to grab on to the boat, and way too easy to lose your grip and get hit in the head by the boat. We have heard more than one story of people dying this way, including someone on a Nordhavn. So amazingly Louis swam around to the mooring line and climbed up the mooring line onto the front of the boat. Once on board, Louis ran to the back, lowered the swim ladder, and Eric swam out, wearing the life vest. Eric had happened to bring a headlamp flashlight for the volcano hike, which was most fortuitous. First of all, he had light to see where he was going, but more importantly, he used the strap of the flashlight to hold his glasses onto his head. If he lost his glasses, he wouldn t have been able to see at all. And swimming with only one hand as he tried to hold his glasses on his face with the other would have been hard in this water. At one point, Eric was feeling too tired to swim and stopped to rest for a couple seconds, thankful he had the life vest on. Eric reached the ladder and started climbing up. His life vest got stuck on the latch that holds the ladder up and it took a heart stopping moment for him to get loose. Story to be continued tomorrow