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#1
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Coast Guard rescues local musician, friends
Clutching a pole to keep his head above water for more than an hour last night, local musician Orlando Phillips kept thinking the worst. He could no longer hear the voices of his brother and two friends, who had also gone overboard when his 25-foot Regal powerboat sank near Herrington Harbour North about 10:30 p.m. The pole and the life vest he was wearing were enough to keep him safe, he thought, but he figured his friends had nothing to hang onto. Luckily, the three men also had life jackets - and a good grip on each other as they drifted more than a mile away from Mr. Phillips. The Coast Guard found the three of them huddled together just after 1 a.m., more than two hours after they had plunged into the bay. Mr. Phillips, 51, who was found by searchers at 11:30 p.m., was overjoyed. "I was convinced they were gone," he said. "I went from devastation to complete joy when they told me they were OK." Mr. Phillips, of Annapolis, had just wrapped up his usual Sunday evening Caribbean-themed show at the Calypso Bay Restaurant and Dock Bar, at 410 Deale Road in Tracys Landing, when he jumped on his boat with his brother, Annapolis musician Gregory Phillips - of the Greg Phillips Trio - and friends Francois Koryak of Glen Burnie and Pantalakis Panayi of Annapolis to take an evening ride. Mr. Koryak, 39, wanted to operate the boat, Mr. Phillips said. So after they got into the open water, he let his friend take the wheel. Minutes after that, the boat's propeller got caught in a commercial fishing net, said Sgt. Ken Turner, a spokesman for Maryland Natural Resources Police. "I had to look for a knife and it took a few minutes to find one," Mr. Phillips said. "After I found it, I started cutting the fish net away. But it was stuck, and the water was so rough that eventually the boat took on water and began to sink." A couple of men started removing water with buckets, while another got on the phone and called for help. "We were bucketing the water out of the boat, trying to prolong the sinking," Mr. Phillips said. "We continued to do that until it just went under." The boat and the band equipment in the bow sank. After he went overboard, Mr. Phillips found a nearby pole and latched onto it for his life. He said he called out to his friends and the group yelled back and forth - until suddenly things got quiet. "They answered for two to three minutes and then I didn't hear them anymore," he said. "I was just hanging onto this pole and I was convinced they were gone. "I felt like if I didn't have this pole I wouldn't make it. So I figured they wouldn't make it. It was total misery." County fire officials, Natural Resources Police, the Coast Guard, Maryland State Police and emergency crews from Calvert County searched the water for an hour before finding Mr. Phillips, according to Sgt. Turner. After being plucked from the water, all Mr. Phillips could do was answer questions and wait. After an hour and a half of devastating thoughts, he was given the good news - his brother and two friends had been found, and everyone was fine. "Just cuts and bruises - we all just had cuts and bruises," he said. "We were all just exhausted too, but really relieved that they got us." Mr. Phillips said his friends weren't too worried about him because he had the pole to hang onto. "But I was worried about them," he said. "The whole thing was terrifying." Mr. Koryak was cited for failure to have a proper lookout, Sgt. Turner said. |
#2
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On Tue, 7 Aug 2007 07:13:17 -0400, "Bill Kearney"
wkearney-99@hot-mail-com wrote: Mr. Koryak was cited for failure to have a proper lookout, Sgt. Turner said. That's interesting. Around here, you couldn't see the bouys on a fishing net at night - they aren't lighted. I wonder why they didn't cite the commercial fisher for deploying an unsafe net in a waterway. |
#3
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On Aug 7, 7:20 am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Tue, 7 Aug 2007 07:13:17 -0400, "Bill Kearney" wkearney-99@hot-mail-com wrote: Mr. Koryak was cited for failure to have a proper lookout, Sgt. Turner said. That's interesting. Around here, you couldn't see the bouys on a fishing net at night - they aren't lighted. I wonder why they didn't cite the commercial fisher for deploying an unsafe net in a waterway. When the guys are fishing for shad or bunker in the CT river, they are supposed to have a light at each end of the net. Stll tough from a low boat to tell if it is a net light, or a stern light of a vessel moving away. |
#4
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#5
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On Tue, 7 Aug 2007 07:13:17 -0400, "Bill Kearney"
wkearney-99@hot-mail-com wrote: Coast Guard rescues local musician, friends Clutching a pole to keep his head above water for more than an hour last night, local musician Orlando Phillips kept thinking the worst. He could no longer hear the voices of his brother and two friends, who had also gone overboard when his 25-foot Regal powerboat sank near Herrington Harbour North about 10:30 p.m. The pole and the life vest he was wearing were enough to keep him safe, he thought, but he figured his friends had nothing to hang onto. Luckily, the three men also had life jackets - and a good grip on each other as they drifted more than a mile away from Mr. Phillips. The Coast Guard found the three of them huddled together just after 1 a.m., more than two hours after they had plunged into the bay. Mr. Phillips, 51, who was found by searchers at 11:30 p.m., was overjoyed. "I was convinced they were gone," he said. "I went from devastation to complete joy when they told me they were OK." Mr. Phillips, of Annapolis, had just wrapped up his usual Sunday evening Caribbean-themed show at the Calypso Bay Restaurant and Dock Bar, at 410 Deale Road in Tracys Landing, when he jumped on his boat with his brother, Annapolis musician Gregory Phillips - of the Greg Phillips Trio - and friends Francois Koryak of Glen Burnie and Pantalakis Panayi of Annapolis to take an evening ride. Mr. Koryak, 39, wanted to operate the boat, Mr. Phillips said. So after they got into the open water, he let his friend take the wheel. Minutes after that, the boat's propeller got caught in a commercial fishing net, said Sgt. Ken Turner, a spokesman for Maryland Natural Resources Police. "I had to look for a knife and it took a few minutes to find one," Mr. Phillips said. "After I found it, I started cutting the fish net away. But it was stuck, and the water was so rough that eventually the boat took on water and began to sink." A couple of men started removing water with buckets, while another got on the phone and called for help. "We were bucketing the water out of the boat, trying to prolong the sinking," Mr. Phillips said. "We continued to do that until it just went under." The boat and the band equipment in the bow sank. After he went overboard, Mr. Phillips found a nearby pole and latched onto it for his life. He said he called out to his friends and the group yelled back and forth - until suddenly things got quiet. "They answered for two to three minutes and then I didn't hear them anymore," he said. "I was just hanging onto this pole and I was convinced they were gone. "I felt like if I didn't have this pole I wouldn't make it. So I figured they wouldn't make it. It was total misery." County fire officials, Natural Resources Police, the Coast Guard, Maryland State Police and emergency crews from Calvert County searched the water for an hour before finding Mr. Phillips, according to Sgt. Turner. After being plucked from the water, all Mr. Phillips could do was answer questions and wait. After an hour and a half of devastating thoughts, he was given the good news - his brother and two friends had been found, and everyone was fine. "Just cuts and bruises - we all just had cuts and bruises," he said. "We were all just exhausted too, but really relieved that they got us." Mr. Phillips said his friends weren't too worried about him because he had the pole to hang onto. "But I was worried about them," he said. "The whole thing was terrifying." Mr. Koryak was cited for failure to have a proper lookout, Sgt. Turner said. Thanks for the post. That verifies the nets causing the problem. Hell, a lookout wouldn't be able to spot the damn things if it was raining. I've never seen the flashing lights working. I suppose if they were going only 5mph a lookout could spot the poles in time. -- John H |
#6
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On Tue, 7 Aug 2007 07:13:17 -0400, "Bill Kearney"
wkearney-99@hot-mail-com wrote: Mr. Koryak was cited for failure to have a proper lookout, Sgt. Turner said. I'd certainly fight that one tooth and nail. On the other hand joy riding at night is inherently dangerous, even with radar. There is a *lot* of loose fishing gear floating around out there, some of it large floating polypropylene line big enough to disable even a mega yacht. Two years ago a 110 foot Broward got snagged off the South Carolina cost while we were out that way. |
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