| Trio fails to right 18; drift all night #20032 05/29/03 08:30 PM 05/29/03 08:30 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 364 Andrew OP
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OP
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 364 | An editor of the Corpus Christi Caller-Times flipped an 18 in moderate conditions and was unable to right it, in spite of the presence (and presumed assistance) of two other people on the boat. They are to be commended for staying with the boat for the 16 hours it took to drift ashore; the lack of personal flotation devices and (probably) harnesses was a major failing. Read about it in the Corpus Chrsti Caller-Times.
Andrew Tatton
Nacra 20 "Wiggle Stick" #266
Nacra 18 Square #12
| | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: Andrew]
#20033 05/30/03 12:26 PM 05/30/03 12:26 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA dacarls
old hand
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 805 Gainesville, FL 32607 USA | They had lack of knowledge, skills, PFDs, harnesses, etc. Also lack of simple sealing the mast so it won't leak and therefore turtle. This is why we use to have Hobie Fleet Sailing clubs, to share good times, information, teach sailing skills, and to safety check each other's boats. Its too damn bad the Hobie and Prindle fleets have mostly gone away. BUT--- NO PROBLEM---- MODERN PEOPLE GET IT ALL FROM THE INTERNET! HAhahahaahaha!
Dacarls: A-class USA 196, USA 21, H18, H16 "Nothing that's any good works by itself. You got to make the damn thing work"- Thomas Edison
| | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: sonicassassin]
#20038 05/30/03 03:18 PM 05/30/03 03:18 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | They were on Good morning America the other day. The boat shown looked like a dismasted Hobie 16 sitting behind them. The skipper was clueless. He was thankful that he was rescued...said he could not afford an expensive sailboat and a bit chagrined over the whole fiasco. One of the women said... well they attempted to tack, shifted their weight and the boat capsized. She did not think it could go over so quickly.
The newspaper paid for the search and rescue.
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: Andrew]
#20040 05/30/03 03:48 PM 05/30/03 03:48 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 290 Pensacola, Florida / Katy, Tex... Cookie Monster
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Posts: 290 Pensacola, Florida / Katy, Tex... | This seems to me, to be an almost inexcusable incident. Just goes to show how incompetent, irresponsible people can get themselves into trouble. I'd like to think that this would never happen to me, but I am not quite that naive. Experience tells me what can happen, will happen, and may happen to me. I lost my bullet proof mentality about 25 years ago. My partner and I may overkill the other way. We always talk about preparing for Murphy's law, and it seems like we always use the belt and suspenders approach too often, but geez.............these people forgot the pants! I am glad they didn't get hurt, but there is no excuse for this. They were unprepared, lacked basic knowledge, and totally incompetent. The newspaper makes it out like they were heroes, and adventurers, but they just didn't have a clue. Stay on the beach or go with someone that knows what they are doing -- or at least wear a $5 life jacket!
Don ARC22 #2226
Don Cook
ARC22 #2226
ADRENALIN
| | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: TheoA]
#20044 05/31/03 08:56 PM 05/31/03 08:56 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL Sycho15
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Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL | Um... at the very least he could have read Phil Berman's "Catamaran Sailing: From Start to Finish" before deciding he could handle anything that came up on a cat.
I used to capsize my boat on purpose for the practice of righting it. Last time (not on purpose) I had only one other person on board and she had never been sailing before. It had been perhaps 2.5 years since I'd capsized last (I sail pretty conservatively when I sail and 18' boat solo!) and we still had no trouble bringing the boat back up
G-Cat 5.7M #583 (sail # currently 100) in Bradenton, FL
Hobie 14T
| | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: Sycho15]
#20045 06/03/03 09:36 PM 06/03/03 09:36 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Yeah - these guys and our news coverage iritate me. Where are the comments about their lack of concern not only for their own safety but for the rules and regulations on the water? If 370lbs could right a 6.0na four times in a day, 400+ should easily be capable on an 18 footer. BTW...name your boat "Flippen Fearless" and you'll know what it means to capsize. For two years I had never capsized during a regatta and I have in nearly every one since naming my boat. Just this weekend...four times on Saturday before finally dropping out of the Myrtle Beach Cat Dash due to my crew being totally exausted (pack a day smoker! ). We weren't alone though...15 knots, 4-6' seas on a terribly overpowered 6.0na...adrenaline...(perhaps that's what I should rename the boat!).
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: Dean]
#20050 06/04/03 02:28 PM 06/04/03 02:28 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | "...or he did not know that you have to point the mast into the wind to right it." What is most effective for me is having the leading edge of the mast pointed into the wind (i.e., bows to the wind). Once the wind is flowing over the sail, even with the boat on its side, lift is generated (unlike an orientation with the top of the stick pointed at the wind.) Weighing in at a little over 200, I have successfully been able to right my N6.0 in winds of 15-20 knots. The first time it happened it was not due to singlehanding the boat, but rather the mistake of my crew who let go of the boat while on the windward side. Trust me. A capsized cat can blow away quicker than most can swim. On another occasion I was sailing with my son, who was eight at the time. The forecast had been for 5-10 knots, but a cold front came in stronger than anticipated, with highly variable winds and gusts well in excess of 20 knots. We got caught off-guard when one of the puffs hit. (I was trying to explain something and it took us totally by surprise.) We went from flat to knocked down in an instant. With my son on the hull, I swam the bows to the wind. In this case, since the winds weren't steady, it was coming up pretty slowly once I leaned into the righting line. I told my 50 lb son to climb out along my horizontal body and sit on my chest. That did the trick. She came up quickly once a puff flowed under the sail.
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | Re: Trio fails to right 18; drift all night
[Re: Andrew]
#20051 06/10/03 08:41 PM 06/10/03 08:41 PM | Anonymous
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Unregistered | Andrew, This is a perfect example of why all SC and ARC products come with a righting system on every boat from the factory. It only takes one night on a turned over boat to frighten someone and turn them completely off on sailing. One fatality can ruin your life. The ARC righting system weighs less than one pound and costs less than $100. It should be a coast guard requirement on all beach cats. Bill | | |
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