Coast Guard hearing on the sinking of the Bounty

Ratickle

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Bounty’s final hours: a ‘haze of war’
Posted on 28 February 2013
Written by Jim Flannery

A Coast Guard hearing on the sinking of the Bounty convenes in February.
The investigation into the sinking of the tall ship Bounty during Hurricane Sandy is far from complete, but documents obtained by Soundings shed some light on her night-long struggle to survive against overwhelming odds.

The 180-foot wooden ship went down 90 miles southeast of Hatteras, N.C., Oct. 29, her fate sealed by engine and generator failures that left her adrift through the night without enough power to pump out the seawater leaking into her bilge. Settling lower and lower in the water, Bounty struggled until about 4:30 a.m., when she rolled on her side in a large wave, throwing overboard her 16 crewmembers, already bundled in survival suits and abandoning ship.

Thirteen of them made their way to 25-person life rafts and a 14th remained in the water until about 6 a.m., when two Coast Guard helicopters from Elizabeth City, N.C., plucked all of them from 18-foot seas in rescue baskets.

Two other crewmembers died: Capt. Robin Walbridge, 63, Bounty’s master of 17 years, and Claudene Christian, 42, great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter of Fletcher Christian, the mate who seized command from Capt. William Bligh in the 1789 mutiny aboard the HMS Bounty, on whose design the tall ship was based. The Coast Guard recovered Christian’s body later in the day. Walbridge remained missing after an exhaustive search.

The Coast Guard convenes a formal hearing Feb. 12-21 at the Renaissance Portsmouth Hotel and Waterfront Conference Center in Portsmouth, Va., to gather facts and ultimately make recommendations to improve the safety and operation of other tall ships. The National Transportation Safety Board is also participating in the investigation.

The documents acquired by Soundings through a freedom of information request detail the search-and-rescue operation. What follows are edited excerpts from 256 pages of transcripts of email and radio transmissions between the Coast Guard, the Bounty and Bounty’s owners, and Coast Guard situation reports and search records.

Bounty’s crew and home base, as well as Coast Guard aircraft crews, watchstanders and command staff, wrestled with the unfolding tragedy on the night of Oct. 28 and early the next morning in what one Coast Guard observer described as the “haze of war.”

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Saw a very compelling show about the rescue last weekend. Made me very proud of our Coasties.
I know that some of our fellow boaters do not appreciate them, maybe had a bad experience on the enforcement side, but around here, we love them.

One of my favorite parts of the story is the rescue swimmer named Dan, who just kept getting in the water with 18 foot seas and occassional 30 foot waves that broke over the basket and just under the helicopter.
He went in time after time, dropped far enough from the rafts to limit the rotor wash on the rafts, he swam up to raft with survivors and said "Hi, my name is Dan, I heard you need a ride." :D
 
Drinking buddy down here was a Rescue Swimmer....til he fell 35' foot onto the boat they were saving....He says it was only 2' feet when he dropped:eek: Impressive individuals.
 
Watching a show on Coast Guard rescue operations. Those guys are pretty crazy. Canada has an agreement that the coast guard can patrol our waters and airspace with an RCMP officer on board. They have full law enforcement powers here. They've rescued people while doing this. Few times a month a CG Dauphin helicopter will pass over my house.
 
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