Boating Safety Tips, Tricks & Thoughts from Captnmike

My Boating Adventures & Adventures in Boating Safety

  • Home
  • Captnmike
  • J/92 Heart of Gold
  • Other Projects
  • PA and PE Help
    • Test 1 Sub
  • Post Index

Man Overboard! / Skipper Overboard!

Author: captnmike

From: George B. Harvey

Sent: 10/6/2008 11:01:26 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time
Subj: Foulweather Bluff, MAN OVERBOARD!

Foulweather Bluff is a nice Saturday day race from Edmonds ( about 15 miles north of Seattle ) to the Foulweather Bluff buoy, then to Schachet Head and back to the marina. It’s a reverse start, meaning the smaller boats start first. With a reverse start you’re passing smaller, slower boats throughout the race, and the larger faster boats are passing you. This makes for some interesting boat-to-boat passing situations and it’s a lot of fun. It’s the first distance race of the fall racing season, and we’ve sailed it a lot and always enjoyed it. This year would be different.

The weather report called for temperatures in the high 50′s and winds building to 30 knots. When we started it was overcast and warm. Winds were southerly about 10 knots. We set the chute on port jibe at the start and began a broad reach to the mark.

The winds began to build.

It wasn’t long until it was blowing 20 knots. By that time we were near Point No Point and were sheltered from the rollers that the heavy winds would create. We were still broad reaching and the Skipper was running off in the puffs. We didn’t have any control problems, but we could see other boats rounding up. We were at hull speed, sometimes higher. Roxanne zoomed past us to leeward, surfing and throwing up spray and spume and a roostertail. Tachyon was creeping up on our stern, and eventually went over us. We toyed with the idea of making it difficult for them, but didn’t. 20 knots isn’t the time for playing spinnaker reaching games.

The winds continued to build.

Soon it was 25 knots and more boats were rounding up. We continued to run down in the puffs and trim the chute conservatively. When we saw the mark we were a little too low, and it was blowing a little too hard to reach up with the chute, so we set the #3 jib and prepared to drop the chute. This would allow a nice, conservative rounding with minimum screwups and we’d be home in a flash. Smart, warm, dry.

The winds continued to build.

Now it was blowing 30 knots and it was past time to get the chute down. The skipper called for the drop. We released the topping lift, but the chute didn’t come down, so the bow couldn’t trip the guy. We tried grinding the downhaul but it didn’t move.

Then we were hit by a hard puff, maybe 35 knots, and were on the edge of disaster. The Skipper called to let the guy run. I was trimming the guy, and began to take it off the winch. The guy immediately fouled on the handle. Because we’d been on port jibe throughout the race we’d never taken the port lazy sheet out of the sheet bag and it fouled as well. I tried to free the lines.

Then we got hit by another, stronger puff, and we were knocked down. It was a fast, violent, vicious hit. Immediately the masthead was 6 feet off the water. The cockpit was vertical and the crew held on to anything they could. We were out of control, the spinnaker was thrashing aloft like a wild animal, thundering, jerking the boat around, making control impossible.

MAN OVERBOARD!

I looked aft and could see the Skipper in the water, rapidly disappearing behind us. We were still knocked down, we had the chute up, the guy hadn’t run, we couldn’t control the boat. No way we could get back to pick him up.

It was the most horrible thing I’ve ever seen.

It was the most horrible feeling I’ve ever had.

We were out of control and helpless, and the Skipper was gone.

************************

That line of asterisks represents what I remember of the chaos of getting the chute down and getting the boat back under control. I remember nothing. I don’t know if I was brave or cowardly, if I did my duty or didn’t, performed or didn’t. I don’t remember a damned thing. I’m really disturbed by that.

I do remember getting back to the Skipper. We were motoring, we’d dropped the jib because it was ripped during the knockdown, so we had a full main and the motor going. The deck was a confusion of lines. A smaller sailboat was maneuvering to try to pick up the skipper but when they saw us coming they laid off.

We had him on the starboard, leeward side of the boat, and some of the crew grabbed him. The Skipper is a tall slender guy, I’m guessing about 180 lb, and they couldn’t get him into the boat. I moved down to help and eventually, and slowly, we were able to get him under the lifelines, into the boat and down below. He’d been in the water for (I’m guessing) at least 10 minutes, and he was not very responsive. I’m not sure how much longer he could have lasted in the water. I was concerned that he might have had a heart attack, or was suffering hypothermia.

We began motor sailing back to the marina. The Skipper is a tough old guy, and he snapped out of it pretty fast. He told us his story of being launched over the rail and head-first into the drink where he swallowed a lot of seawater. He got into dry clothes and spend much of the trip back vomiting the salt water he’d swallowed into a bucket. We were motoring into a foul tide and 6 – 8 foot rollers and 35 – 45 knots of wind for what seemed like forever.

Usually after a disaster we’re all energized and laughing and full of ourselves for surviving and coming out OK. This time we sat on the deck, stolid, silent, unmoving, as the spray pounded us and the rollers rocked the boat and green water rushed over the deck. It was a time for quiet introspection: what could have been, did I do my duty, what should we have done differently, how narrowly we avoided killing the Skipper.

*********************

We’re a good boat, and a very skilled and experienced crew. I’d say we average 20 years racing experience per man. When you’re thinking of an overboard situation you always think you’ll just swing around and have the crew member onto the boat in a couple of minutes, no problem. I suspect, however, that nobody goes overboard in nice conditions. It’s always when it’s blowing too hard, the seas are too high, the boat is under marginal control at best, all lines are fouled, and THEN someone goes overboard. At the worst possible moment. It’s a sobering experience.

The Skipper’s a lucky guy.

George Harvey, Seattle, WA. Crew member S/V Snake Oil a Davidson 40

(Editors Note: George has been sailing and racing for about 35 years, many of those years on top placing boats)

Man Overboard!! Formatted for Printing (pdf):

( © http://www.captnmike.com/ 2008 )

This entry was posted on Saturday, February 13th, 2010 at 8:28 pm and is filed under Safety Thoughts, Sailing and Boating Skills. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Man Overboard! / Skipper Overboard!”

May 5th, 2010 at 10:46 am

roberto marcio silva says:

Thanks for sharing these sobering lines with us,Captain,a very good site altogether.

Leave a Reply

  • Welcome to CaptnMikes's World!

    • Leave Your General Comments Here
    • Useful Web Sites and Information for Boaters and USCG Auxiliary Members
    • Interesting and Useful Boating Books
  • Recent Articles

    • Puget Sound Ferry, Tanker and Navy Ships Security Zones
    • Important Seattle Area Boating Information
    • Pictures of Wandering from Stockholm to Lisbon:
    • Anchor Types and Tips
    • Anchoring Your Boat
    • Marine Sound Signals
    • Weather Class
    • Navigation Exercise 2
    • Nautical Training Charts
    • How to use a Winch on a Sailboat
  • Article Categories

  • Captnmike

    • Aux. Photos
    • Sailing Pictures
  • Usefull Links

    • Flotilla 21 North Seattle
    • Flotilla 21's Boating Safety Classes in Seattle
    • Lee Youngblood Photography
    • Three Sheets Northwest
    • United States Maritime Academy
  • free counters
  • Article Tags

    anchor guidelines anchoring boat equipment boating Boating Etiquette Boating sound signals books bowline Chart Reading cold water Correcting Correcting and Uncorrecting a Compass crew skills cruising disposal dispose driving instructions first aid first aid kit Fish Picker flares Hypothermia Icicle Seafoods knots left handed marine radio Nav. Exercise Piloting Puget Sound radio usage reference rules of the road sailing Seattle seattle boating information seattle web sites Seward Seward Fish SFI Shilshole Marina training materials TVMDC Uncorrecting VHF Radio weather
  • Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2010 captnmike.com - Boating Safety Tips, Tricks & Thoughts from Captnmike | Entries (RSS) | Comments (RSS)

WordPress theme designed by web design