http://kosmos.liveflux.net/blog/2008/11/26/boats-in-danger-and-emergency-resc
ues-part-2-of-3/#more-778
Boats in Danger and Emergency Rescues - Part 2 of 3
Continued from yesterday
Once Eric climbed
aboard, he noticed that things in the cockpit
were sliding out under the door. We lost a
plastic mat we keep back there, but Eric was able
to save the shoes that were back there, bringing
them inside. He opened the back door and turned
on the light switch. He knew power was still
working, since the anchor light and little red
LED courtesy lights were on around the outside of
the boat. He first noticed the hallway
refrigerator had come open and almost every
single thing inside it had fallen out and smashed
on the floor. Lots of stuff that had been sitting
out had been thrown to new places. The good news
was that Eric didn't hear any sounds of the
bottom crunching against the rocks. He went into
the pilot house and saw both bilge pumps were
running. Oh no. Eric turned on the engine, and
then ran downstairs. The whole engine room was
flooded with about a foot of water. It was now
about 2145.
Eric ran back upstairs and showed Louis how to
use the manual bilge pump located in the
starboard aft locker. Louis pumped away. Eric
turned on the navigation electronics, untied the
mooring rope (he made no effort to try and save
the rope, he just let it go), and gunned the boat
at full speed away from the shore at 120 degrees
as he had previously planned. He didn't go out
very far, wanting to stay close to shore so that
they could easily evacuate should they not be
able to get the flooding under control.
Christi was left sitting in the bar with some of
Louis's crew (there were 8 people total on
Louis's sailboat, so there were people on the
beach and in the bar). Christi found out that
they had already called the coast guard and been
told that the coast guard felt that the
conditions were too unsafe for them to come and
help. Eric called Christi (Eric on the satellite
phone, Christi on our cell phone that we normally
carry with us all the time) and told her about
the flooding, and asked her what she wanted saved
should Kosmos sink. Eric kept thinking about
different ways he could get some stuff off Kosmos
and to shore so that at least everything wouldn't
be lost. He got out another life vest and was
getting ready to deploy the liferaft.
Tai had followed Eric to the beach. Remember,
Tai's knees were throbbing with severe pain and
he really needed to sit and give his poor knees a
rest. This was the second walk he made down the
beach in agonizing pain. Tai watched from the
shore, figuring that if Eric or Louis got into
trouble trying to board Kosmos, he could swim out
and save them. Tai watched for a while from
shore. It was evident there was something
seriously wrong. Eric was doing circles in
shallow water, and deviating from the plan of
heading straight out to sea could mean a problem.
The stabilizers weren't on either, which Tai took
to be a bad sign, since the boat was rocking so
violently that the water was coming over both
sides of the boat. The same local guy that had
been watching Eric and Louis earlier approached
to Tai and asked if Tai was with one of the boats
in trouble. Tai said yes, and affirmed that he
suspected there was a serious problem with
Kosmos. The local kindly called the police and
the coast guard and acted as translator. Tai had
no idea that the sailboat had already made
contact with the coast guard. Tai got the same
answer. Tai's new friend also offered a lot of
helpful pointers, but since Tai had no way of
communicating with Eric, they were moot.
One of Louis's crew mates had realized that it
probably wasn't smart to leave the dinghy motor
lying in the sand, so he kindly hid it for us in
a nearby garden. He gave Tai explicit
instructions as to where to find it, and then
headed back to the bar. Tai headed back to the
bar shortly thereafter to tell Christi about the
coast guard and to see if she had talked to Eric
on the satellite phone. Tai got the low down on
the flooding, and immediately went in search of a
bilge pump to help keep ahead of the flooding
Kosmos.
The police came out a few minutes later to talk
to the respective crews at the bar. The officer
drove up in a golf cart that could only be
distinguished as "police" by the small blue
flashie light on top. He was wearing blue jeans
and a t-shirt. He was accompanied by two other
men in casual clothes who we don't think were
fellow police. None of the three spoke any
English. Fortunately, Louis's girlfriend,
Elizabeth, speaks a little Italian. She is by no
means fluent, but she could speak enough to
effectively communicate. The policeman called the
coast guard again and put Christi on the phone
with them. Fortunately, the man she spoke with on
the phone spoke fluent English and didn't seem to
have a problem comprehending her American accent,
as many Europeans do. We found out later that the
coast guard had been confused by the two vastly
different emergency reports coming in so close
together from the same place and had called their
English speaking commander, who was off duty, in
to deal with the situation himself. Christi
explained the situation and had to repeat herself
a few time to clarify the fact that there were
two boats in trouble, one with two passengers and
one empty. This time the coast guard said they
would send help and a boat would be there in 40 -
50 minutes.
Tai had returned to the bar mid phone call and
told us that emergency bilge pumps were a
technology that had not yet reached Italy. Tai
was assured that the coast guard would not have
an additional pump on board to give to Eric or
Louis. A few minutes later, the coast guard
called Christi back and told her they could not
reach Eric on the radio. She gave them the
satellite phone number. They still had not left
yet. Just as an FYI, there was indoor and outdoor
seating in the bar. The bar had already closed,
but the two crews were still congregated on the
tables and chairs in the outdoor area.
Aboard Kosmos, the manual bilge pump stopped
working, assumedly clogged with something. Eric
turned the helm over to Louis, telling him to do
circles in shallow water, while he went into the
engine room to get some things set up he hoped to
never use. It was a spare bilge pump (a 3700
gallon per hour 12 volt unit), a 12 volt portable
battery pack, and long hose. The water was slowly
rising. Eric wired the pump to the portable
battery pack and ran the hose through the living
room and out the back door (there is a hatch in
the floor of the living room so you can climb in
and out of the engine room, which is directly
under the living room). The latch that keeps the
back door open was not holding the door open in
the rough seas, and the door kept trying to slam
shut onto the hose. Eric had to tie the door
open. Getting the bilge pump rigged with its
wires and hose while the boat was violently
rocking was tricky to say the least. Thankfully,
the emergency bilge pump worked! The water level
was going down! Phew! He knew the little battery
pack wouldn't last forever if more water was
coming in, so he worked on wiring the pump to the
boat's 12 volt system. He got it working and the
water level continued to steadily go down.
He went to the pilothouse to check on things
there. Eric noticed the batteries weren't
charging up. Oh no. That meant the alternator was
dead. And without power, no bilge pumps.
Thankfully Kosmos is designed with two on engine
alternators. He flipped the emergency switch to
connect the 2nd alternator to the batteries. Much
to his relief, the 2nd alternator was working and
the batteries started charging. It was now 2345.
Oh, and Eric's legs were cramping up something
awful, making the work in the engine room where
he was crouched low physically painful. Somewhere
in the midst of all the activity, the coast guard
had called Kosmos on the satellite phone and let
them know they would be arriving in 20 minutes.
The coast guard call was about 2315.
This whole time, in between everything else he
was doing, Eric had been trying to find the leak.
He checked everything he could think of and
turned off all the through hulls. He couldn't
find anything. When he went to check the
starboard stabilizer, which is located in the
bathroom, he saw the bathroom port hole was open
and that tons of water was flooding in through
it. He checked the other portholes and found the
one over the bed in the forward berth was also
open, and even more water was getting in through
there. With the windows closed and the three
bilge pumps running, the water level was steadily
going down and the imminent fear of sinking was
gone. Relieved, they decided to head to north and
east to where it would be calmer. They turned on
the stabilizers, praying they had not been
damaged by the rocky bottom. They worked. Yes! It
was now 0000. They found that away from Scari,
conditions got significantly calmer.
At 0030 they found a target on the radar 4 miles
out that they thought might be Louis's boat. The
target didn't seem to be moving, and the charts
showed nothing but sea, so it probably was a boat
and not a buoy. They used the radar's ARPA to
track it and saw that it was moving at 0.5 knots.
It had to be Louis's boat. They went to retrieve
it. Eric asked Louis where the closest place was
with suitable marine facilities for fixing the
leak, and he said Lipari, another Aeolian Island
about 25 miles southwest.
Eric called Christi to give her the update. Eric
reported excitedly that the leak seemed to be
under control, and that he thought they had found
Louis's boat and that they were going to retrieve
it, then go to the nearby island of Lipari. There
was no boat yard on Stromboli, and they needed to
get to a boat yard ASAP to have both of their
damaged boats repaired. Kosmos was holding her
own for the time being, but the source of the
leak was unknown and it could get worse. We had
no idea how badly damaged Louis's boat might be.
Eric was thrilled the coast guard would be
helping them in all this. He envisioned the three
boats would be going to Lipari together. Christi
filled him in on the bad news that the coast
guard said their job was to save lives, not
boats. The coast guard had clearly told her that
they would not make any effort to save the
sailboat at all. They planned to board Kosmos,
and if it was safe, they would take Kosmos back
to Scari. If it wasn't safe, they'd make Eric and
Louis abandon ship. We could see the coast
guard's perspective, but the truth of the matter
was the waves in Scari were violent and it was
guaranteed that Kosmos would be beaten up even
worse, the bilge pumps would eventually burn out,
and she would sink. Scari was not an option for
Eric - he had to get to Lipari. He decided to
continue towards Louis's boat.
Eric left Louis to do watch and continued to
search for the source of the leak. He stuck his
hand in the bilge water and was zapped with
electricity. Oh no! This meant he couldn't easily
look for the leak in the most likely of places.
It also meant that he couldn't fix either of the
other two installed bilge pumps should they die.
The rubber gloves he had were probably not going
to long enough either.
The coast guard called again just as Kosmos got
to Louis's boat, at about 0130. They were in a
little inflatable rib about a mile away. It had
to be wet and cold and miserably rocky in that
little vessel. We found out later that they sent
their fastest boat rather than a slower, enclosed
boat because they were so worried about Kosmos
sinking. On the VHF radio Eric could hear them
just fine, but they could not hear Eric, so they
called on the satellite phone. They wanted Kosmos
to turn around and go to them. Eric was hesitant,
knowing that if they turned around, Louis's boat
would be lost for good. They decided to get
Louis's boat first, since it was only 10 minutes
away at this point.
Remember, it is windy, raining lightly and pitch
black outside from the cloud cover. Louis's boat
didn't have a single light on - not even the
anchor light. It was very hard to see on such a
dark night and they would have never found it
without the radar. As they neared, Eric shined
the spotlight where the radar said the target was
located. It really was Louis's boat! Yes! The
boat was swinging wildly from side to side, so
Eric couldn't get too close to it for fear of
being whacked by the mast. Eric got as close as
he dared. Louis was about to jump in when Eric
remembered the key. Louis would be really bummed
if he swam out there only to find he had left the
key with Eric. Louis jumped in and swam to his
boat and boarded it. At least this time Louis had
a life vest on. Eric kept the spotlight on the
boat so Louis could see it, and a kept flashlight
trained on Louis to monitor his progress and make
sure he was OK. By 0145 Louis was safely on
board. After a quick inspection, it looked like
the boat was completely unharmed, the most damage
being a few bucketfuls of water in the bilge.
Even though they thought she may have hit rocks
when she was close to the shore, she had managed
to miss the rocks and was floating happily along.
Eric gave Christi a quick call with the status
update, and then he and Louis both went to meet
the coast guard vessel. The coast guard was
confused about two boats showing up rather than
just one, and straightening out the confusion
took a few minutes. Louis didn't have a satellite
phone and the coast guard's radio wasn't working,
so the coast guard shouted to Eric and Louis to
follow them to the "safe place". Neither had any
idea where the coast guard was taking them.
Christi had told Eric it would be Scari, but in
Eric's mind Scari wasn't a "safe place" and he
was hopeful they were going somewhere else. Eric
was exhausted. He spotted a couple cokes in the
wreckage on the living room floor and drank them
for a quick caffeine boost. Sadly one of the cans
had sprung a leak and was only half full. While
following the coast guard, Eric did see a couple
eruptions from the Stromboli volcano. They were
big explosions of glowing orange spray and it was
pretty spectacular. It was too bad he couldn't
relax and enjoy the show.
It wasn't until 0245 that they realized that they
really were going back to Scari. The waves got
bigger and more violent the closer they got. Eric
was unhappy about it but unsure what to do. Louis
decided to take the advice the helpful local on
the beach had given him earlier to go to an
anchorage on the west side of the island where
the seas were calmer. He broke away from the
coast guard and went on his own. Since Louis's
boat was unharmed, he didn't need to get to
Lipari. As Kosmos and the coast guard vessel
neared Scari, Eric asked where the coast guard
would be anchoring. They replied that it was too
rough to anchor. They were just going to see that
Eric got off the boat onto the pier, then go on
their merry way. When Eric explained that he
couldn't stay in Scari and had to get to Lipari,
they basically told him to do whatever he wanted.
They wouldn't escort him to Lipari, but they
would keep in touch in case Eric needed them to
come out again, and they told him exactly where
the boat yard was on Lipari. The water level in
the engine room was now low enough that the third
bilge pump no longer needed to pump, but the
other two were going non-stop. The water level
wasn't going up, nor was it going down, so there
was definitely a significant leak. Eric decided
to go for it and turned around.
Back at the bar, the police came by and said one
of the boats was coming in. When Tai and Christi
had last spoke to Eric, Eric had said both
vessels were coming in. Tai and Christi were
hoping that meant Eric had defied the coast guard
and gone to Lipari anyway, though they were
terrified about whether he would make it before
the leak got worse. Christi, Tai, and Elizabeth
went down to the pier to wait, wondering which
vessel would be coming in. The waves were
crashing violently over the top of the pier. They
were all dreading the boat's arrival, knowing
that the boat would likely be destroyed by the
powerful waves. Later the police came back and
said neither vessel was coming in. The three of
them were relieved, but thoroughly confused. They
called Eric and got a status update. Eric told
Tai and Christi to get on the first ferry to
Lipari.
To be continued tomorrow
and it only gets crazier
--
Georgs Kolesnikovs
Your host at Trawlers & Trawlering, formerly Trawler World, since 1997
Site see: http://www.trawlersandtrawlering.com