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Vic Smith wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 01:44:16 GMT, "NE Sailboat" wrote: I wish I had an auto pilot! There may some instances where they will capsize your catamaran. Here's an interesting article by Cliff Biddick in the Cruisers & Sailing forum about a 42' Atlantic. http://www.cruisersforum.com/forums/...ntic-5486.html The post containing the article is down a bit, but doing a find on Biddick will get you right to it. snip Fascinating story. Good work by Cliff and his salvage team on the recovery. Don W. Catamaran Capsizes on Little Traverse Bay by Cliff Biddick Tuesday, October 19th was much like a lot of others in the fall in Northern Michigan. The East wind blew up Lake Charlevoix creating a sea that gently, but relentlessly, rocked the tug “Heather B” when my cell phone rang. Jeff Pulaski, the Service Manager of our Harbor Springs yard was on the other end. “Are you in the middle of anything?” he asked. After 35 years in the boatyard business, I have come to expect the unexpected on a regular basis. “We have a customer who has capsized his 42’ Atlantic catamaran in the middle of Little Traverse Bay,” he said. The Coast Guard has taken him and his two friends to shore and they are fine, but the boat is drifting, pushed by the East wind out of the bay. Can you help him? That’s the way another adventure in the towing and salvage business started. Andy Hellstrom and I began the preparations for finding the boat and recovering it. Our instructions were fairly straightforward; the owner was attempting to locate divers. Andy and I, with the “Heather B”, were to proceed to Bay Harbor where we would take the owner and the divers aboard. The Coast Guard was monitoring the vessels drift by using the EPIRB that was still signaling its location from within the cabin of the inverted boat. Our trip to Bay Harbor was uneventful as the heavy tug plowed through the head sea from the East. When we arrived at the dock, the owner and two divers, with their gear were awaiting us. We loaded quickly and immediately headed Northwest to the position the Coast Guard had provided to us. We found the “Starry Night” easily in the late afternoon light and went right to work. Our first concern was debris and lines trailing from the boat but this did not prove to be a problem. All lines just hung downward and the boat was 'aground' on its’ masthead in 68’ of water. One diver went into the water and attempted to get the sails under control. After a couple of hours, the diver had not been able to get the mainsail 'up' and under control and had only one line on the headsail, the boom still hung straight down, and many cut lines added to his challenge. The dinghy, still in davits, was righted and tied alongside the tug. In diminishing light we made our first attempt at righting her. Unfortunately, the sails were still hampering the 'tow ability', causing the big cat to pull hard off our starboard side. With the daylight now totally gone, we elected to tow the inverted boat bow first, eight miles into Harbor Springs, while still upside down. This meant staying in about 100 feet of water. We did not wish to cause additional damage to the boat and although plenty of horsepower was available, we towed at 1.7 to 1.9 knots for 8 miles and arrived in the harbor about 1:00 am. We anchored it in 100’ of water with a strobe light marking it as a navigation hazard. The next morning we returned to the boat. In a matter of a few hours, the diver had the sails 'up' and the mainsail furled, the two 200 foot anchor lines wrapped around the dagger boards and the towing bridle re-rigged. The boat was ready for the righting. The process involved rigging a bridle from the forward cross arm brought to an apex aft of the boat on center where it was tied to our 1-1/2” x 600’ Dacron towline. The knot consisted of a bowline together with two half hitches to secure the bitter end. I mention this because we actually pulled it right out of the line, twice, in the righting process. Neither line broke but the knot was non-existent after letting go. On the third attempt the boat tracked straight aft, 'tripped' over its’ own sterns, the bows rose and over it came, slowly and gently until it floated once again, albeit low in the water. We immediately put two 1” electric pumps and a 4” gas pump into her. While the owner, the diver and Andy started the re-organization process, the tug took her gently in tow into the dock at Irish Boat Shop. With the help of the boat shop crew, the “Starry Night” is being dried out and preserved awaiting a surveyor’s inspection and determination of her future. Why the catamaran capsized remains a mystery. The owner and his two companions had been sailing several hours in 15 to 18 knots of wind. They were inside the cabin with the boat on autopilot. In what can only be considered a 'microburst', it went over in less time than it took the owner to shut off the autopilot. He and the crew simply 'walked' up the wall and onto the ceiling where they remained dry for an hour and a half until the rescue divers from the Emmet County dive team arrived. The owner actually called the Coast Guard using his cell phone as his masthead antenna was 70’ under water. |
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