Please select your home edition
Edition
Rolly Tasker Sails 2023 LEADERBOARD

When is a Sailing Boat Not Worth Having?

by Jim Stingl, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel/Sail-World on 19 Nov 2007
Abandoned sailboat, photo by by Jack Orton SW
When is a sailing boat not worth having? ANSWER: When you've put it onto the rocks so badly that even the salvagers don't want to retrieve it, let alone the owner, who can't be found. Jim Stingl of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel tells of just such a boat you can see any Milwaukee day:

Pavel Bernek had ambitious and romantic plans for the vintage sailboat Falcon he lovingly restored.

But he never got it out of Milwaukee. If you've driven along Lincoln Memorial Drive lately, you've probably seen the abandoned boat stuck in the rocks and bathtub-depth water maybe 100 yards out into Lake Michigan just north of Bradford Beach.

People keep calling the Coast Guard and the police, thinking someone out there may need help.

The 34-foot sailboat, the Falcon, has been tilted and wedged in the rocks for more than two weeks, and Bernek apparently is in no hurry to rescue it. The Coast Guard and the Department of Natural Resources can't reach him, and neither can I.

'The man has no insurance. He seems reluctant to pay us for the three days we've got into the job already,' said Jerry Guyer from the local salvage company Pirate's Cove Diving.

$2,000 so far and perhaps $10,000 when and if the job is done, Guyer said. Three of his own boats were damaged trying to get to the sailboat in the treacherously shallow water.

'You can get close to land anywhere in Milwaukee except there. You can't get within 1,000 feet of the shoreline without hitting rocks that are just below the surface,' Guyer said.

DNR warden supervisor Rick Reed said the owner could be fined about $500 a day that the boat sits out there after 30 days have passed. But fines are a last resort; it's preferable to use the money for salvage costs, he said.

The Coast Guard has no plans to fetch the boat because it's not considered a barrier to navigation or an environmental hazard, despite the diesel fuel and motor oil it contains, said Senior Chief Chris Purdy from the Milwaukee station. 'The case is closed, from our perspective,' he said.

The Coast Guard and Milwaukee police rescued Bernek and another man from the boat when it ran aground. Rafts were used to get them to safety.

The man who knows the most about Bernek and his plans is Gene Cramer from Cramer Marine in Milwaukee. He owns a similar boat, known as a Chinook 34, and Bernek kept his vessel in Cramer's boatyard from March to September.

The cockpit and parts of the deck were rebuilt. A new mast and rigging were added. Fresh paint was applied. Bernek and his friends spent many long weekends working on the fiberglass and wood boat, which was built in the 1950s. Cramer estimated it was worth about $10,000 when they were finished.

Bernek, who is 40ish, is from the Czech Republic and has been staying in the United States on a work visa. He was living somewhere in the Chicago area and working as a painting contractor.

And he had a sweetheart. 'Their plan,' Cramer said, 'was for Pavel to restore this vessel, learn to sail, cross the ocean, pick her up in Europe and return to the warm waters of the Caribbean and beyond.'

But he failed to consult the charts of Lake Michigan that clearly show areas to avoid. There are no warning buoys on the water, and lake levels are very low.

Guyer is not so sure he can get the boat out of there in one piece. Last summer, he resorted to chain saws to cut up a similarly stuck mint-condition boat. The pieces were hauled to the dump.

But the longer it sits there, the more damage it will sustain from wind and waves and vandals and eventually ice.

In the meantime, Milwaukeean Brook Scheiber, who is more of a kayaker, has asked the Coast Guard about acquiring the crippled boat for himself.

'I know a little about maritime salvage laws, and it was my belief that if one finds a derelict and abandoned vessel afloat in the sea and physically claims it, the vessel becomes theirs,' he said.

Probably not, said Coast Guard Lt. Commander Joe Malinauskas. 'This ain't the high seas out here,' he said.

Besides, the boat is pretty much ruined, or will be by the time it's pulled out over the rocks, Cramer said.

'It's not worth anything. What it would cost you to get that out of there, you'd never get it back,' he said.

Cramer waxed poetic after gazing at the ill-fated sailboat sitting out on there on the waves and the giant rocks.

'She is ironically being cradled by the very demons that ended her life. The wind and waves have now turned her bow toward shore, as if to say I want to go home, won't somebody please rescue me from this fate.'

Visit the Journal Sentinel Online by clicking here
sMRT AIS Man Overboard Beacons AUS / NZNavico AUS Zeus3S FOOTERNorth Sails Loft 57 Podcast

Related Articles

Globe40 and La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec
A look at the Globe40 and the La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec It's always an encouraging sign when a round-the-world race begins its second edition, especially when the steeds in question are approachable boats for most serious sailors.
Posted today at 7:00 pm
35th Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup at Porto Cervo Day 2
Magic Carpet E, Jolt, Nice, H2O and Moat lead in their respective classes The second day of the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup delivered excellent racing conditions for the fleet assembled in Porto Cervo, with north-westerly winds averaging 16 knots.
Posted today at 6:22 pm
iQFOiL U23 Worlds at Portimão day 2
Today, attention once again turns to the unique race area in front of the Santa Catarina fortress. Yesterday, the opening day of the U23 World Championships set the tone for a high-level competition in Portimão. Strong northwesterly winds of 15-18 knots allowed the Race Committee to launch four Course Racing starts.
Posted today at 5:47 pm
2025 Star Worlds at Split, Croatia Day 2
Negri and Lambertenghi win Day Two after tactical duel on the Adriatic The second day of racing at the 2025 Star World Championship in Split, Croatia, saw the full 101-boat fleet return to the water for Race 2 after a 90-minute wait ashore.
Posted today at 4:22 pm
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 1 Day 3
All That for This... While most people ashore were sitting down for lunch, a strange ballet was unfolding at sea off Dieppe. Carried by the rising tide in the Channel and with barely a breath of wind, the solo sailors struggled to escape the second course mark, Daffodils.
Posted today at 3:12 pm
America's Cup: Breaking through the Silent mode
Some new Rules emerge - teams restricted to just one or no new masts for the recyled AC75s A look at the state of the Cup - given the three weeks of silence since the hasty final Protocol signing. Entries have been open for three weeks. Some changes in the ability of the teams to get new gear have been leaked. There's more..
Posted today at 2:11 pm
The Ocean Race Europe Leg 5 Day 3
Paprec Arkéa leads as new breeze sends IMOCA fleet speeding south Yoann Richomme's Paprec Arkéa team took two points for leading through the Leg 5 Scoring Gate ahead of Allagrande Mapei Racing.
Posted today at 1:37 pm
Adventure Sport is moving much closer to audience
OnboardLive opens up new storytelling avenues for The Ocean Race A new innovative technology solution, OnboardLive©, is making it possible to experience adventure sports, including offshore sailing, live, and in high-definition broadcast quality, even from the most remote corners of the world.
Posted today at 10:37 am
Marine Auctions: September Online Auctions
The bidding will open on Tuesday 23rd September The bidding for the September Online Auction will Open on Tuesday 23rd September and will close on Monday 29th September 2025. Entries are now being accepted for October's Online Auction.
Posted today at 6:26 am
Lipinski & Carpentier win GLOBE40 Prologue Race
CREDIT MUTUEL crossed the finish line at 16:25 in Cadiz Today at 16:25, the CREDIT MUTUEL Class40 crossed the finish line in the prologue GLOBE40 in Cadiz. After waiting a few days in Lorient, the winners covered the miles of the course in 4 days 2 hours and 25 minutes.
Posted on 8 Sep