{"id":58,"date":"2007-05-30T18:00:00","date_gmt":"2007-05-30T23:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/setsail.com\/?p=58"},"modified":"2009-04-20T13:41:43","modified_gmt":"2009-04-20T18:41:43","slug":"capsize-lessons","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/setsail.com\/capsize-lessons\/","title":{"rendered":"Capsize Lessons"},"content":{"rendered":"

The following is copied with permission from the May 2007 issue of Sea Horse<\/em>, the monthly magazine of the Royal Ocean Racing Club (our favorite sailing magazine). We recommend reading the comments several times. The lessons learned might just save your life…<\/p>\n

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Ed Broadway, owner and skipper of the Max Fun 35 <\/em>Hooligan V, has written some thoughts on the recent loss of his yacht together, tragically, with one of its crew. <\/em>Hooligan V’s accident at 0320 on 3 February, some seven miles south of Salcombe, is every skipper’s nightmare. The incident is being officially investigated so any comments are confined to lessons that can be learned (particularly in a Fastnet year) rather than speculation on what caused the loss of the boat’s keel.<\/em><\/p>\n

“After the capsize four of us met at the stern of the boat, opened the flare pack and fired three parachute flares from the water in the dark. Then a wave dropped into the container, which promptly sank, along with the rest of the flares.<\/p>\n

“We had taken the ISAF crew course so knew something about liferafts. Ours was stowed at the stern of the cockpit sole with the knife for cutting the lashing attached to the tiller ahead of the raft – all now under water and beyond reach. We all carry knives so one of us started to cut through the lashing to release the liferaft.<\/p>\n

“With the stern submerged for much of the time, and at maximum reach for the rest of the time, this proved very difficult and exhausting. It took about half an hour to release the raft and by then the cold was getting to us. Frozen hands dropped the knife just as the last strands were cut through, and we were rapidly losing the ability to think rationally. We finally boarded the raft but found it impossible to bail with the flexible bailers provided.<\/p>\n

“There were now several ships in the area so we fired handheld red flares and were picked up after about 50 minutes.”<\/p>\n

Key lessons:<\/p>\n