Páginas

sábado, 9 de febrero de 2019

Coast Guard, Navy respond to disabled sailboat 110 miles off Virginia Beach

The Coast Guard Cutter Reliance crew works to rig the sailboat, C'est La Vie, for towing 110 miles east southeast of Virginia Beach, Va., Feb 8. 2019. U.S. Coast Guard photo.

PORTSMOUTH, Va. — Coast Guard Cutter Reliance is bringing two crewmembers and their disabled sailboat back to shore Friday, after a Navy ship responded to their distress call offshore.

A Navy destroyer crew heard the pan-pan distress call on the VHF marine-band radio Thursday night. They came to the sailors’ aid and relayed the message to Coast Guard. After the ship’s crew determined there was no immediate distress on the sailboat, they waited nearby until the Reliance arrived early Friday morning.

The two men reported that they were traveling from Sheepshead Bay, New York, to St. Croix on their 32-foot Kerie Elite sailboat, the C’est La Vie, when the tiller for their rudder snapped.

Reliance’s crew transferred the two crewmembers aboard and put the sailboat in tow. It may take 48 hours for them to get close to Cape Henry, where a commercial maritime towing company is expected to bring the sailboat back to shore.

"It was lucky that the Navy heard the heard the vessel’s pan-pan," said Lieutenant Amanda Faulkner, a watchstander in the 5th District command center. "Having the right on-water communications equipment is critical to having a safe trip. These sailors had an Emergency Position-indicating Radio Beacon, or EPIRB, on board, which they would have needed to use if no one had been in VHF range."

-USCG-