Dramas in Grenada
Ile Jeudi
Bob and Lin Griffiths
Sat 15 Jun 2013 21:27
Saturday 15 June 2013
Every morning at 7.30am (except Sundays) there is a ‘VHF Radio Net’ for
Grenada Cruisers. That day’s volunteer Net Controller coordinates the
broadcast of various topics – Weather, including a hurricane watch, Social
Events, Treasures of the Bilge (items for sale or barter), notifications of
shopping buses running from each bay and Local Businesses who get to offer their
wares to the cruisers over the radio. It’s a very useful function in lots
of ways for all the cruisers.
The first item each day is ‘Priority Traffic’ which covers navigational,
health or emergency issues. About a week ago we were sad to switch on to
be told about a boat which had run aground on a reef in the adjacent bay – one
of the reefs we showed in a photograph in a recent blog. We had seen the
yacht set off for Trinidad the previous afternoon with two people on
board. She was caught in a brief storm and decided to make her way back to
Grenada for repairs. In the dark the skipper mistook Mount Hartman Bay
(reefs in the entrance) for Prickly Bay (which is clear water) and he ended up
on the reef where he had rested all night. The Grenada Coastguard were
standing nearby as was Darren who owns Prickly Bay Marina. Darren managed
to arrange for a local shallow draft dredger to come and tow the boat off the
reef. She didn’t look to us as if she could be re-floated as the tidal
range is quite small here. Happily we were wrong and she was hauled off,
didn’t take on water and was able eventually to make her way slowly back to
Prickly Bay and was hauled out at Spice Island Marine. Both crew were
uninjured apart from the emotional stress of it all and as far as we know the
boat is repairable.
It was discovered throughout this that Grenada Coastguard do not listen to
Channel 16 (which is the international distress channel) unless they are already
at sea. This is about as useful as a chocolate fireguard to a boat in
trouble. In the end they had been contacted by telephone (not usually
possible from a boat) by Darren of Prickly Bay. Fortunately Darren has
recently started ‘Rescue 1’, a voluntary service offering assistance to yachts
in the Prickly Bay area, and he was in attendance in his RIB (Rigid Inflatable
Boat) coordinating everything whilst the Coastguard vessel watched.
Yesterday morning there was another announcement that a large (80 ft)
luxury yacht at anchor in Prickly Bay was currently on fire. This is one
of the worst things that can happen anywhere but especially on a boat and we
were immediately told that the owner and crew were off the yacht and safe.
The owner had woken up about 4am to go to the toilet and stood up into
smoke. He crouched down into clear air and woke the crew member and,
seeing that the fire had already taken hold in the vicinity of the switch panel,
launched the dinghy and went over to another yacht who radioed and then
telephoned for help. Again the attempts to contact the Coastguard were not
successful but Darren/Rescue 1 came out again. Rescue 1 managed to get the
Coastguard who came out in their fast boat (moored only half a mile away) with a
hose and pump. The Coastguard discovered that the pump didn’t work but
only after smashing a window on the boat to gain access. This of course
accelerated the fire.
The fire brigade had been contacted and they came out with masks and oxygen
tanks only to find that the tanks were empty! This is the Caribbean after
all.
In the meantime there were explosions on board as the fire reached first
the gas cylinders (cooking gas) and then the dive tanks. The fire had
taken hold and by the end of the day she was just a shell.
We have seen this yacht several times in Bequia and Grenada and she is
(was) a beauty. Made of aluminium by Jongert (builders of serious one-off
yachts) she was being run by the owner and paid crew for charter. Insurers
are arriving today and arrangements have been made to have her towed to a safe
location and scuttled, unless the insurers decide to have her moved to a
boatyard to salvage the lead in the keel and the aluminium.
These photographs were taken from a nearby boat about 6am soon after
dawn. Fortunately the yacht on the left was upwind of the fire:-
This apparently was not many minutes later:-
The mast was made of carbon fibre and melted and buckled:-
The remaining hulk at the end of the day, taken from the stern:-
The warped aluminium hull:-
There were immediate and heart warming offers of help over the VHF to the
owner and crew who had just the clothes they were standing in. One lady
who comes on the radio each day promoting Cutty’s Island Tours offered
accommodation which was gratefully accepted.
It was a horrible thing to happen and fortunately nobody was hurt.
Several meetings have since taken place with the government to try to improve
the response to emergencies.
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