The Coast Guard in North Carolina knew Sunday night, May 5, that a
37-foot sailboat nine miles off Oregon Inlet was having problems in a
growing storm. They were maintaining hourly contact with the crew on
board Seaker — a 70-year-old man and two women — when at 3 a.m. Monday
an EPIRB signal came in. But this was from the sailboat Lou Pantai. A
half-hour later a second EPIRB signaled, this one from the 54-foot
sailboat Flying Colours, and by 6:15 yet another EPIRB, from the 67-foot
sailboat Illusion, had been triggered.
Hell was breaking loose out on the Atlantic. Seas were piling up to 40
feet, and winds were topping 60 knots as the Coast Guard in Elizabeth
City scrambled C-130 aircraft and HH-60 helicopters. Thirteen lives were
in jeopardy on the four sailboats; Coast Guard rescuers were on the way.
The four yachts were scattered hundreds of miles apart. Seaker was in
shoal water close to the coast. Lou Pantai was 225 miles southeast of
Cape Hatteras, apparently south of Flying Colours, which was 200 miles
east of Cape Fear and 50 miles east of Illusion.
Lt. Cdr. Daniel Molthen was the pilot of the helicopter launched a
little after 6:30 Monday morning to fly to the closest boat, Seaker,
which was dragging its anchor.
“We finally found them, and they were pretty much … getting pummeled by
these 30- to 40-foot waves,” Molthen says. The three sailors were inside
the boat — a couple in their 70s and their 45-year-old daughter, he says.
“I got right on top of them, and finally the guy poked his head out, and
we finally got radio contact with them again. We told them to wait for
[the] swimmer to get near.”
[To hear Molthen tell the story and see video of
the rescue,
click here.]
The rescue swimmer was Michael Ackerman, who in February saved two
sailors in 45-foot seas from a capsized catamaran east of Bermuda. “It
was one of the most amazing things I’ve seen,” says Molthen. “It’s
pretty tough swimming out there in the Atlantic in those waves. It took
him a couple of seconds to swim that 40 to 50 feet. He grabbed the back
of the boat and just pulled himself up into it … almost like Spiderman.”
Hovering above Seaker, Molthen watched the scene unfold as Ackerman and
the daughter jumped into the ocean to await the helicopter’s rescue
basket. “They weren’t separating from the sailboat fast enough,” says
Molthen. “The boat was pitching up and down so much, it might have come
up and impaled us [with its mast].”
Seeing the mast thrust up toward the chopper’s belly, Molthen climbed
quickly. But then the rescue unfolded seamlessly — by 8:30 a.m. Seaker’s
crew was on dry land in Elizabeth City.
[To watch Seaker’s crew getting
off the rescue chopper, click here.]
Meanwhile, another helicopter crew had flown nearly two hours over the
Atlantic to a spot where a C-130, having spotted flares, had found Lou
Pantai and its crew of three. Their boat had sunk and the C-130 had
dropped a life raft. It was partially deflated when the chopper arrived.
The sailors, all suffering from hypothermia, were hoisted into the
chopper and flown to land.
[To watch this rescue unfold from inside the
Coast Guard helicopter, click here.]
Another C-130 had been launched from Elizabeth City to search for Flying
Colours, and at 9:31 a.m. it arrived at the coordinates relayed by the
EPIRB. There were 35-foot waves and 45-knot winds but no sign of the
Little Harbor 54, which was heading to Annapolis, Md., from the
Caribbean. The aircraft dropped marker buoys to begin charting the drift
of the ocean so that a formal search could be mounted.
At 11:17 a.m. yet another C-130 was launched from Elizabeth City, and
more than two hours later it began circling Illusion, the
aluminum-hulled 67-footer. It was taking on water and had lost its
steering. A helicopter had been diverted to Illusion’s location minutes
earlier from Morehead City, N.C., and would arrive on the scene at 2:35
p.m. Lt. Scott Walden was flying that chopper.
Walden had begun flying at 8 o’clock Monday morning, following the C-130
that was sent out to find Flying Colours. “We ran into some weather, and
we got the report that the C-130 did not find them,” he says. “We turned
around and went to Beaufort, N.C., to get fuel.” Then they got the word
to head to Illusion.
Traveling in and out of showers with a low ceiling, Walden’s crew found
Illusion in 30- to 40-foot seas swept by 50-knot winds gusting to 60
knots. “They had a little bit of sail exposed,” the pilot says. “The
sailboat was still moving west at 5 to 6 knots.”
The crew of Illusion — the captain a Scotsman, Walden says — had lost
control of the boat when an anchor dislodged in the big seas. Hammering
the hull below the waterline, it punched a hole in the aluminum, causing
the boat to flood.
“They lost the engine and generators, and the … lines became entangled
with each other,” Walden says. “They couldn’t get the mainsail up. They
couldn’t get the sail they had up in. They were stuck in that
configuration.”
It had taken Walden about an hour to reach Illusion. Bucking the
wind, it took 90 minutes to get the two men and a woman back to
Beaufort, where they were discharged unharmed, according to the
Coast Guard.
Flying Colours’ EPIRB signal stopped transmitting at 5:38 a.m.
Monday, and there were no further communications from the
sailboat. The Coast Guard suspended the search for Flying
Colours May 12.
“Coast Guard cutter and aircraft … searched all of the likely
and even unlikely areas where the crew could be,” Coast Guard
Rear Admiral Larry Hereth says in a statement. Searchers were
unable to locate Flying Colours or any debris in a search area
larger than the size of Texas.
“Sadly, the threshold of survival seems negligible,” Hereth
says.
The four Rhode Island residents were identified as Patrick
“Trey” Topping, 39; Jason Franks, 34; Rhiannon Borisoff, 22; and
Christine Grinavic, 26.
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