Jennifer Appel, one of the two sailors rescued by a Navy ship after being stranded in the Pacific Ocean for almost five months, told ABC News via email that she and her fellow mariner didn't activate their emergency beacon because they weren't in "an immediate life-threatening scenario".Rico says the Coast Guard should bill these idiots for the cost of 'rescuing' them...
Appel, an experienced sailor, and Natasha “Tasha” Fuiava, a sailing novice, left Honolulu, Hawai'i on their sailboat on 3 May 2017 with their two dogs, Valentine and Zeus, bound for Tahiti, 2,600 miles away in the South Pacific. Less than a month into their voyage, during a spell of bad weather, Appel and Fuiava's sailboat's engine stopped running for good. Two months into their voyage, they began issuing daily distress radio calls.
They told Coast Guard officials that they never turned on the boat’s Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (EPIRB) because they never felt "truly in distress," nor did they think the situation was "dire" enough to warrant it, a spokesperson for Coast Guard District 14 said.
The EPIRB, which the Coast Guard confirmed was properly registered, would have immediately notified search and rescue teams of a vessel in distress, officials said.
Appel said via email to ABC News today that "EPIRB calls are for people who are in an immediate life-threatening scenario. It would be shameful to call on Coast Guard resources when not in imminent peril and allow someone else to perish because of it."
"The USCG Honolulu Sector receives many calls a day," Appel wrote. "They have limited resources for the enormous span of water their area covers. A fair amount of those calls are for people in the process of losing their boat and swimming in the ocean. While I do not deny that a broken spreader, blown backstay and non-functioning motor are all disabling situations, and we had all at the same time when we were at the Equator and 160 degrees West, our boat was still afloat; we had food, water, and limited maneuvering capability due to fortifying the broken items at the mast. (Yes, I climbed the mast in open ocean to make hack patches so we could continue as any good sailor would.)" She added: "Pahn Pahn calls, which we made, are different than EPIRB or Mayday calls," Appel wrote. "Pahn Pahn calls let the Coast Guard and other boats know that the vessel has issues, but they are not immediately life-threatening."
USS Ashland, carrying two women who were rescued after months at sea on their storm-damaged sailboat, arrives at White Beach Naval Facility in Okinawa, Japan on Monday, 30 October 2017.
"The Pahn Pahn distress calls that we made daily after we realized we could not return the last 726 nautical miles to Oahu from roughly 8 degrees North and 156 degrees West, that went unanswered and allowed us to reach Wake Island, were determined to be due to antenna issues that only allowed for a one to two nautical mile of reception. We thought we had about two hundred miles reception and were notified of the discrepancy once aboard the Navy vessel," she wrote. "Had we known our calls were going nowhere -- we would have used the EPIRB, but hindsight is 20/20."
"We did a Mayday call for assistance only when it was absolutely necessary and help did arrive because the resources were available," she wrote. "We are grateful for that."
The women were rescued last Wednesday by the USS Ashland in the western Pacific, nine hundred miles southeast of Japan, nearly five thousand miles from their intended destination. Appel said in an interview provided by the Navy that their rescue was the "most amazing feeling because we honestly did not believe that we would survive another day in the current situation."
The women and their dogs have since made it to solid ground in Okinawa, Japan.
USS Ashland, carrying two women who were rescued after months at sea on their storm-damaged sailboat, arrived at White Beach Naval Facility in Okinawa, Japan Monday, Linus Wilson, a boating expert and author of three sailing books, told ABC News that he wondered if the women had fabricated some of their claims. “Several of Appel’s statements about her voyage do not check out and don’t ring true to many experienced sailors,” he said in an e-mailed statement. “I think a reasonable person may start out thinking that Appel was just a foolish skipper, but it seems likely many events that she recounts may have been fabricated to sensationalize the story. It would be a shame if someone used a very expensive Navy rescue as a publicity stunt,” he added.
Similarly, Phillip Johnson, a retired Coast Guard officer who was responsible for search and rescue operations, said something about the women’s story just does not add up.
"There's something wrong there," Johnson told The Associated Press on Monday. "I've never heard of all that stuff going out at the same time."
The Coast Guard said it has some additional questions for the women, but it characterized its process as a routine "review" and not an "investigation."
31 October 2017
More sea-going stupidity
Karma Allen and Emily Shapiro have a Good Morning America article about some dumb mariners:
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