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The Legacy Sails Away
Bryan Burrough: The Legacy Sails Away Regular Vanity Fair readers may recall a piece I did back in January 2007 concerning a mammoth sailing yacht, the Legacy, that had gotten itself hopelessly marooned on the salt flats just outside the harbor at Key West, Florida. Well, it's taken more than two years, but the yacht has finally been floated free. It all started back in October 2005, when Hurricane Wilma wrenched the 158-foot Legacy from its moorings and tossed it into a federal sealife sanctuary, where it stuck in the mud like a majestic marine statue. (At low tide the water barely covered my ankles.) The ship's owner, Florida businessman Peter Halmos, got into a prolonged tussle with Washington bureaucrats over the best way to salvage it without damaging the surrounding salt flats. In the meantime, Halmos and his crew rented a group of houseboats, lashed them together, and anchored a mile away, taking up permanent residence in Man O' War Channel to protect his ship. After two years of arguing, everyone finally agreed on a salvage plan this winter. A company named Byrd Salvage brought in a barge, the Helen B., which used two 80-ton pulling cables to drag Legacy off the flats into open water. To minimize damage to the sanctuary, enormous underwater pumps were used to belch sand and mud into the trench the yacht created as it lurched along its three-mile journey through a line of special "turbidity" curtains, which prevented all that churned-up sediment from spreading across the flats. Legacy finally floated free on February 25. The original Vanity Fair story sparked a flurry of follow-up articles around the world, but Legacy's removal has gone mostly unnoticed outside Key West. For now, the yacht remains anchored offshore. Halmos, who was planning to search for a sunken Spanish galleon at the time of his shipwreck, remains in his self-styled "Aqua Village," happily laying plans to refit the ship. Knowing Peter, a hardheaded, ambitious sort, he'll be up and running and looking for treasure again before you know it. |
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