Rudder Lost Mid Pacific- FLASHBACK to Avatar 2009

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Rudder Lost Mid Pacific

We began our approach from seaward to the infamous pass at Mopelia, otherwise known as Maupihha, about 130 miles west of Bora Bora, still part of French Polynesia, somewhat nervously. Well 50% nervously….Rebecca being the nervous half. The channel into Mopilia is the narrowest, about 45′ wide, and can have the highest velocity of outflow of any pass in the South Pacific. All the ocean waves washing over the barrier reefs of the atoll have no where to go but out this single channel.

The wind had shifted out of the traditional south east and now blew from the north. Waves rolled towards the pass then raised up and tripped when hit by the out flowing current. The conditions would quickly become more turbulent the longer the wind blew from the north. This was serious eyeball navigation. Reefs on port and starboard, a turbulent river of water in between. There is one white post at the seaward edge of the pass and another further into the lagoon. We had set the stay sail and sheeted it in tight to help slow the roll of the boat in the rough water ahead. The sail would give some effort to overcome the strong current. With the engine in gear, we had to approach from just the right angle, through breaking waves. Just as we started in to the waves, I smelled rubber burning, and Patrick concurred. At the last possible moment to turn out of or approach we quickly turned the boat around to be slapped broadside by rolling waves and we worked our back to open water. Climbing into the egine compartment, as Patrick suspected, the alternator belt had worn through. We installed a new PowerMax alternator from Hamilton Ferris which has exceeded the output of our previous 150 amp alternator, but at the expense of having to over tighten the belts. To get a higher alternator output at a slower engine RPM they use a smaller pulley which puts a larger load on the engine and the single fan belt. So he removed the belt and installed and tightened a new one as I sailed the boat back and forth in front of the pass. We spent a good half hour motoring around outside the pass to break in the belt and make sure it wouldn’t loosen up and cause problems through this pass. The guide book to Mopelia says the pass can have up to a 9 knot current. It would be impossible to turn around in pass once you are in it and not to enter it in a northwest wind- we had a north wind with an increasingly western tilt to it, so we were on the edge of not being able to go in. Every minute we spent breaking in the new belt brought more turmoil to the pass putting us closer to impassible conditions. .

When Patrick felt the new belt was OK, we made another approach to the pass.. with staysail up, engine gauge needles on their green settings, we were committed. Patrick could not take his eyes off of the washing machine waters in front of him for even a second to look at the engine RPMs. It took continual and hard twists of the wheel to keep us on course. I read the numbers to him when he needed it. A wave picked us up and surfed Brick House towards the narrow slot in the reef. More throttle, more RPMs more noise from the engine and commotion surrounding us. We needed even more power to fight the four knot current, let the staysail out to catch the following wind. I ran back and forth to the Link 2000 monitor to make sure the alternator was still pumping in amps, signifying that the belt was remaining intact. Whenever I stopped to look ahead or to the side of Brick House, tears welled up in my eyes, with complete fear of what I saw. Coral on both sides of the boat, close enough to touch with a boat pole, current rushing by, speed over ground 2 knots as the engine roared louder than we have ever pushed it, and a big wave slapped into the cockpit. Yikes! Before we knew it, we were out of the ocean torrent and struggling in flat water against the current. Quick decisions had to be made to go around a number of coral patches and heads. It all looked incredibly shallow, although 10 feet was the smallest number flashed on the depth sounder. Slowly we escaped the grip of the current and the water became much deeper. We motored a few miles to the northern part of the atoll to get the best protection from the wind and waves. Three other boats congratulated us on our arrival. It was hours before my stomach settled down from that one! The other boats had arrived only an hour ahead of us but in that hour the conditions at the pass had greatly deteriorated.

Later that afternoon we took a dinghy ride around to see what the snorkeling was like. We didn’t find a lot of life inside the lagoon unfortunately….which was why we came here in the first place. The next day, we joined Nick and Marlene on the yacht Content to dinghy out to the pass and do a drift snorkel through it. When I saw the pass again, even though it had calmed down some, I chickened out…I wasn’t ready to face it again. I stayed in one of the dinghys, anchored in the lagoon and waited for the others to do their death drift. Even inside the lagoon the current rushed by so feverishly that one of the snorkelers almost got hurt when swept going from one dinghy to the other dinghy. I prayed the anchor would hold while I waited for them. Within seconds they had drifted through the pass and were out at the breaking waves. I feared for their lives as I watched. If the dinghy was not aimed into the waves as they held onto the sides, the dinghy could easily be flipped over. But they spent a lot of time out there, diving on the outside reef…I began to regret that maybe I was missing something fantastic that Id regret. I was relieved when they came back and said that there was very little to see.

On shore, the only inhabitants were pigs, lots of them. They were not friendly but did keep a distance even when we tossed opened coconuts to them. A hurricane had hit this atoll in 2000 leaving only shells of a few houses standing.

A few days later the 20 knot wind shifted to the south east. We picked up anchor and moved down to the southeast corner of the atoll to take up protection behind the long island. The yachts Bravado, Content and one other sailed out the atoll with the wind shift. We found 2 more boats in the southeast corner, both of whom are French citizens who cruise here in French Polynesia for 6 months every year. They were here in Mopelia for several weeks and had been here in previous years. They were waiting for a favorable wind to blow them in the direction of Raitea where they would be hauled out till their next season of sailing.

Landing our dinghy on the sand beach, we met an older man, Taputu Kalami, and a younger man who seemed to be a hired helper. On this day 5 people live on this atoll- so we met 40% of the population!

Listening to the morning cruisers Coconut Net on the single side band radio, we had learned that the 37′ Swiss flagged yacht, Avatar drifting 200 miles west of Mopelia had lost its rudder and was hoping that someone could deliver 6 two by fours so they could build an emergency rudder system. Looking up each word in the French dictionary, we wrote a not explaining the disabled yachts problem and the wood they needed. Taputu was very concerned and took apart the roof of his copra shed to supply the wood! From the bottom of an old bucket they even dug out nails for us to bring to the yacht Avatar! We spent the rest of the day hanging out with them on their island. We asked about the pigs that we had seen on the north part of the island. They explained that there is more for the pigs to eat up on the north part of the island so they let them roam up there rather than trying to keep them near their home in the south. Twice a week they go up to split open fallen coconuts for them, and they were going soon up the narrow coral trail; would we like to come? SO we rode in their pickup truck with them, with all the windows down – the exhaust pipe was broken! We bumped our way past blown over homes and other obvious hurricane destruction. We passed the one other family living on the island, husband, wife and a child. When it started raining everyone rolled up the windows and held our breaths!

After feeding the pigs, they took us to a great windswept, waveswept beach, on the east side, filled with polished rocks and shells. I found a beautiful shiny cowry shell and when I showed my enthusiasm about it, one of the men presented me with an even nicer bigger one as a present. It was very endearing to see these 2 grown men combing for polished rocks and being so enthusiastic when they found a nice addition to their collection. Then that night, they invited us to their home for dinner, I brought salad, and crackers with dip. They made unbelievable chicken curry and coconut crabs, along with white sticky rice. It was a feast. They also loved the TANG I brought. Dining at their simple wooden table, with cement floor and single exposed light bulb hanging from the wiring from the solar charged battery was pretty amazing. They don’t have refrigeration, so the chicken must have been just recently butchered…I hope. Some gifts were exchanged and we signed their thick visitor book, and said our goodbyes and thank yous. We left in the dark that night, as they explained that they wouldn’t be here the next day before we departed- they were going to work the coconut trees at on the north of the island at 5am.

At 8am the next morning, with Avatar’s repair lumber strapped to the side deck of Brick House, we picked up anchor and made our way around the abandoned pearl farm buoys, out to the pass. That terrible pass awaited us in strong south easterly winds of about 20 -25 knots. Surprisingly, with the wind from the south east, the pass was completely benign with no standing waves at all outside of it, and about a 2 knot current to help move us through. We laughed as we went out, talking about how we really probably shouldn’t have come in during those north winds…that this was such a pleasant departure!

SO destination from Mopelia is the moving target Avatar – 237 miles to our west. The winds were 20 -25 but the GRIBS weather reports showed that the wind would be decreasing as we got closer to Avatar. The wind actually died a little sooner, and we motored quite a bit to get to them before the wind would pick up again and make the transfer of materials too difficult. When we were about 40 miles away, we stopped motoring and sailed slowly to meet up with them at sunrise.

Sunrise found us with huge swells but no waves and little wind. We circled around Avatar trailing the first piece of lumber on a long rope as though towing a water skier. When they had the first piece of lumber in hand, we then kept the boats a safe distance from each other and quickly transferred piece by piece the 7 pieces of lumber. Then we edged the boats a little bit closer to pass over the bag of nails. Mistake. The bag nicked something on Avatar and landed in the water and slowly sunk. Patrick dove in, but without fins he could not swim fast enough to catch up with the bag and it was lost to the great depths.

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Patrick and Beat swam back and forth between the boats with additional parts that may help with the repair, and to discuss the options. Beat had put a lot of thought in to the design and was fairly set on how he would make and attach this rudder. The one flaw we both saw with the system was that he had made the rudder out of a spinnaker pole and a tabletop. Running poles are made for compression loading not side loading.

We drifted for hours near Avatar while Beat and his wife Lola assembled their new rudder. We also rummaged through our boat looking for anything which might be useful to Avatars situation. But Beat had a definite thought out plan on how to strap his makeshift rudder to the starboard quarter of Avatar. By afternoon the assembly was finished and ready for testing. We agreed to sail along side of him until he felt it was going to work for him. After a few hours of sailing with him slowly, and both Beat and Lola taking turns getting to know their new steering system, they encouraged us to leave them be, it was working well. They had even figured out a way to make it so they could steer from the cockpit instead of leaning over the gunwale to steer. They were pretty happy when we left them, as well as having plenty of water and food for the long slow voyage ahead of them to American Samoa- more than 800 miles to their west. If nothing else, Drifting would get them there. If the wind was more than 15, their plan was to dismantle and take the rudder up in to the cockpit, because they didn’t feel that the rudder would take weather any heavier than about 15 knots. It was blowing 10 when we left them.

Later than evening, the wind picked up to 15, maybe even 20. We heard the next morning that they did not disassemble the rudder when the wind picked up, and that the running pole had folded inwards under the hull. Beat made a wooden dowel to repair the pole t and was confidant that it was stronger now. He was waiting for lower winds to deploy it again. He drifted for many days waiting, while we made good time to Palmerston Atoll in the Cook Islands.

We stayed in Palmerston a grand total of 5 hours since the wind and swell was making it a very uncomfortable anchorage on top of them wanting $70 to check in to this unofficial check in point. Patrick became greatly annoyed when the “official”, who could not stamp or passport, said that we had to pay any way because we were passing through Cook Island waters! Another yacht had departed Palmerston an hour before us when he was greatly annoyed by the “officials” and their fees. That yacht had hauled auto parts and medicine from Raratonga free of charge for the locals and now was greeted with fees. We sailed on to the very desolate Beveridge Reef , another couple days away, and entered the pass there and anchored near a wrecked steel fishing boat. The wreck is the only thing at the atoll above water. There is no land at all.

Patrick immediately scoped out the wreck hoping to find something to bring to Avatar which was now 350 miles to our north. He found 2 great stainless steel posts and other fitting that may fit Avatars needs for a newer better rudder system which could fit up into the broken off rudder post. We spoke with Beat on the SSB the next night explaining the plan. Beat was appreciative but he wanted to stay with his current design.

So we turned our attention the fishing and snorkeling on Beveridge Reef.

 

 

Communication Evolution on Brick House : Iridium GO! Predictwind!

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Indian Ocean Emergency Contacts for Sat Phone

There are new updates to the Emergency Contacts for the Indian Ocean.

Here is the new version..most important is SRILANKA addition.

EMERGENCY CONTACTS IN THE INDIAN OCEAN

IERCC +1.936.582.3190. This is for nonemergency at sea for SAR and MedEvac with GEOS Safety Solutions…This is for technical questions, changes of phone numbers etc. Make sure you complete registration and setup with them BEFORE you head out to sea.

For emergencies, press the SOS on the iridium GO or in the application and they will be called. You want to have completed registration and setup with them so they know who your emergency contacts are, what you phone number is, the particulars of those onboard, etc. 

Here are other numbers to program in to your contacts on your phone/application. They should be verified. Contacts can change frequently, and while MOST of these numbers have been called by me personally to make sure that they go to a person and are the right numbers to use, do NOT rely on them without your own verification. I compiled these in late 2017 with updates in early 2018.

Contacts for RedSea Passage are NOT included in this list, primarily because I decided not to go that way. If anyone has the contacts BEYOND the Seychelles and wants to forward them to me for inclusion in this list, I can do an update to the list. If you prefer to send me a link, I can include the link instead. 

I hope this list can make life a little easier for you, for I never found one anywhere when it was my time to go. Again…verify them!!! I will not be responsible when and if nobody answers on the other Ned or new numbers come in to effect. This is meant to be only a guide for the information you should look for to have the proper information to store in your phone.  Hopefully you never need any of these contacts:

SriLanka

[Feb 2019] NEVER involve the agency in your distress call, or even for a tow. The agencies in SriLanka charge exorbitant fees, such as $1000 for a 3-5 mile tow…instead call Coast Guard or Navy:

Navy: +94262220045 This # is right in Trinco) +94112210000.  +94772530934 +94112212650 +94112466236 +94112212121 +94112212151 +94112212501 +94112212311 (These numbers are in Columbo or selsewhere…try them all til you get someone)

Coast Guard: +94412260265 +94412260268 +94412260267 +94412260312 +94412260752

Also some emails that may work:

Cofn@navy.lk

Cos@navy.lk

Nhqdgo@navy.lk

Comeast@navy.lk (Trincomalee)

Australia  +61 2 6230 6811 

India west  +91 22 24316558 &  +91 22 24388065

India east   +91 44 25395017 &  +91 44 25360342 &

+91 44 25363210

Andamans +91 3192 246081

Mauritius  +230 208 8317  &  +230 208 3935 & 230 208 5950 & 230 211 0839

Reunion +262 262 434343  

Seychelles +248 4610293  OR  +248 4224616

S Africa Capetown + 27 21 9383300

AUSTRALIA- Marine Rescue Co-ordination Centre 

 

  Email: rccaus@amsa.gov.au 

Phone: +61 2 6230 6811 

——————-

INDIA- Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centres:

Email  – indsar@vsnl.net (24 hour response time)

  • icgmrccmumbai@mtnl.net.in 

  • mrcc-west@indiancoastguard.nic.in

Phone – +91 22 24316558 &  +91 22 24388065

Eastern region – MRCC Chennai

  • Email enquiry response time – never
  • Information provided by Mumbai
  • Updated:  January 2013

Email – mrcc-east@indiancoastguard.nic.in 

  • isareast@dataone.in 

Phone – +91 44 25395017 &  +91 44 25360342 &

+91 44 25363210

Fax – +91 44 25395018 & +91 44 23460405

———————————————————

ANDAMANS region – MRCC Port Blair

  • Email enquiry response time – never
  • Information provided by Mumbai
  • Updated:  January 2013

Email – mrcc-ptb@indiancoastguard.nic.in  &

  • com_cs@dataone.in

Phone – +91 3192 246081

Fax – +91 3192 242948

  Website: www.indiancoastguard.nic.in

—————————————————————

MAURITIUS- MRCC – via Mauritius Radio – 3BM

  • Email enquiry response time – within a few hours 

  • Updated: October 2015

Email: opsncghq@orange.mu or ncgo9ps.mpf@govmu.org

Phone: +230 208 8317  &  +230 208 3935

Fax: +230 212 2770

HF/SSB:  DSC watch on all DSC Distress alarm frequencies –

2 to 16 Meg – to initiate contact

Use 2-16 Meg distress frequencies to manage an

incident

VHF:  DSC listening watch 24/7

Voice listening watch on ch16 24/7

MMSI number: 006459022

INMARSAT number:  464 500096  &  464 500097

Note: HF/SSB and/or satphone to maintain contact with a

vessel in distress during an incident. 

————————————————————-

 

REUNION – MRCC – via Mauritius Radio – 3BM

  • Email enquiry response time – within a few hours 

  • Updated: October 2015

Email: reunion @mrccfr.eu or 

Phone: +262 262 434343  

Fax: +262 262 711595  

HF/SSB:  DSC watch on 2Meg DSC Distress alarm frequency

only – to initiate contact

Voice watch on 2182 only to initiate contact 

Use 2-16 Meg voice distress frequencies to manage

an incident

24/7 voice listening watch on 2182 & 8291

VHF: 24/7 voice listening watch on ch16 

MMSI number: 006601000

INMARSAT number:  422799193

Note: HF/SSB and/or satphone to maintain contact with a

vessel in distress during an incident.

———————————————————————————

 

SEYCHELLES- MRCC via Seychelles Radio – S7Q
– Email enquiry response time – within 24 hours
– Updated: June 2011

Email: mrcc.seycoast@email.sc   OR   shipshore@cws.cwpls.com 

Phone: +248 4610293  OR  +248 4224616

HF/SSB:  No DSC alert service 

Voice listening watch on 2182 & 7696 ONLY 

Prefer email communication for incident management

VHF:  NO DSC listening watch

Voice listening watch on ch16

INMARSAT C: 466499997

—————————————————————-

SOUTH AFRICA – MRCC Cape Town 

  • Email enquiry response time – Immediate 

  • Updated: January 2013

Email – MRCC SA: mrcc.ct@samsa.org.za

Phone – MRCC SA: + 27 21 9383300

Email – Cape Town Radio: maritimeradio@ixmail.co.za 

Phone – Cape Town Radio: +27 21 5510700

Fax – Cape Town Radio: +27 21 5513760

 

HF/SSB:   DSC watch on all DSC alert frequencies to initiate

contact

Voice listening watch on 2182 via coastal network of

11 sites

Voice listening watch on 4, 12 & 16 Meg distress
freq (not 6 or 8 Meg)

Uses 2-16 Meg distress frequencies to manage an

incident

VHF:  NO DSC listening watch

Voice listening watch on ch16 via a coastal network of 27

sites

——————————————————

USCG Regional Emergency Numbers 

ATLANTIC Area SAR Coordinator

Commander

U.S. Coast Guard

Atlantic Area

Portsmouth, Virginia

Overall responsibility for areas covered by RCC Boston, RCC Norfolk, RCC Miami, RSC San Juan, RCC New Orleans and RCC Cleveland plus a portion of the North Atlantic Ocean out to 40 degrees west longitude.

(757)398-6700

PACIFIC SAR Coordinator

Commander

U.S. Coast Guard

Pacific Area

Alameda, California

Overall responsibility for areas covered by RCC Alameda, RCC Seattle, RCC Honolulu and RCC Juneau.

(510)437-3701

RCC Honolulu

(operated as JRCC with DOD)

Commander

14th Coast Guard District

Honolulu, Hawaii

Hawaii, U.S. Pacific Islands and waters of Central Pacific Ocean assigned by international convention (extending from as far as 6 degrees south to 40 degrees north latitude and as far as 110 west to 130 east longitude).

(808) 535-3333

Sector GUAM

(coordinates SAR under RCC Honolulu)

Commander

SectorGuam

Guam and other U.S. territories and possessions in the far western Pacific Ocean.

(671)355-4824

RCC USA

Boston

Commander

1st Coast Guard District

Boston, Massachusetts

New England down to and including a portion of Northern New Jersey plus U.S. waters of Lake Champlain.

(617)223-8555

RCC Norfolk

Commander

5th Coast Guard District

Portsmouth, Virginia

Mid-Atlantic states including the majority of New Jersey down to the North Carolina / South Carolina Border.

(757)398-6231

RCC Miami

Commander

7th Coast Guard District

Miami, Florida

Southeast states from the South Carolina / North Carolina border around to the eastern end of the Florida panhandle plus a large portion of the Caribbean Sea.

(305)415-6800

RSC San Juan

(Sub-Center of RCC Miami)

Commander

Sector San Juan

 San Juan, Puerto Rico

Southeast portion of the Caribbean Sea

(787)289-2042

RCC New Orleans

Commander

8th Coast Guard District

New Orleans, Louisiana

Southern states including the Florida panhandle to the U.S. / Mexico border in Texas plus the inland rivers including the Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio and tributaries.

(504)589-6225

RCC Cleveland

Commander

9th Coast Guard District

Cleveland, Ohio

U.S. waters of the Great Lakes, their connecting rivers and tributaries.

(216)902-6117

RCC Alameda

Commander

11th Coast Guard District

Alameda, California

California and Eastern Pacific Ocean waters assigned by international convention off the Coast of Mexico.

(510)437-3701

RCC Seattle

Commander

13th Coast Guard District

Seattle, Washington

Oregon and Washington

(206)220-7001

RCC Juneau Alaska

Commander

17th Coast Guard District

Juneau, Alaska

Alaska, U.S. waters in North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea, and Arctic Ocean

US offices that may or may not help.  At least they may be able to look up the right number or contact the right person for you, and speak english

(757)398-6700

(510)437-3701

(671)355-4824

(617)223-8555

(757)398-6231

(305)415-6800

(305)415-6800

(504)589-6225

(216)902-6117

(510)437-3701

(206)220-7001

 

Sailboat vs Tugboat: We prepare for a passage to Zanzibar, East Africa