Dismasted, holed, but all crew on Spirit of Izivunguvungu rescued
by Caryn Dolley Independent online/Sail-World on 26 Mar 2011
Spirit of Izivunguvungu - crew rescued Sea Lizzy Hange
Four Cape Town sailors have been rescued from a sinking yacht in the remote southern seas after four tense days without communications or sightings of the vessel.
Missing since Monday, The Spirit of Izivunguvungu was spotted by a Liberian-registered ship sent to try to locate it near Tristan da Cunha.
Late last night, Royal Cape Yacht Club commodore John Martin said the ship had rendezvoused with the yacht.
Martin said all four crewmen – skipper Kader Williams, 30, of Strandfontein, Anthony Edwards, Kenwyn Daniels and Joweal Klasse, of Ocean View – were found unharmed.
But the yacht, sponsored by the City of Cape Town and which participated in the Heineken Cape to Rio yacht race earlier this year, was found to have a broken mast that had damaged the rudder, leaving the crew unable to steer the boat, which had started sinking.
'An engineer got on board the yacht and deemed it unseaworthy. It was a risk to life. It had started sinking with the boys on board,' Martin said.
It was not immediately clear why the yacht’s communication system and engine had not been working.
During the late night rescue operation, the four crew members were transferred on to the ship – expected to arrive off Cape Point in about a week.
'The ship is not stopping in South Africa so they will then be transferred on to a naval warship off False Bay,' Martin said.
This meant Daniels, who turns 21 on Tuesday, would not be able to celebrate his birthday on land and in Cape Town, as the four men had initially planned.
Williams, a teacher at the Izivunguvungu Sailing School, had tutored Daniels in sailing for years. His three crew members were Izivunguvungu graduates.
Last night, Williams’s mother, Mariam Williams, sobbed with relief when she heard her son was safe.
The Heineken Cape to Rio yacht race had been his first international voyage as a skipper.
Earlier yesterday, the City of Cape Town said the tracking device on the yacht, which at one stage had been moving erratically, had only been working intermittently.
'The yacht appears not to be moving at present, which could indicate engine problems. Based on the tracking device on board, the yacht it is in the area of Tristan da Cunha,' it had said.
International maritime authorities had then issued an alert for ships to watch out for the yacht. -
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