In-hull video of Groupama 3 - Post-capsize
by Franck Cammas and friends on 20 Feb 2008

The Groupama 3 crew were all rescued unharmed. Groupama - Franck Cammas
http://www.cammas-groupama.com
The crew of Groupama 3 have posted some incredible video taken just after the 30 metre multihull capsized off New Zealand on Monday. The sequence shows the crew down below retrieving grab bags and tools, then using the escape hatch to get out onto the main hull and speak to rescuers.
For the video www.cammas-groupama.com/do/mediatheque?type=V&sscat=172&page=0&media=1738!click_here
There is the video of the actual rescue www.cammas-groupama.com/do/mediatheque?type=V&sscat=172&page=0&media=1740!click_here
Tuesday morning, at first light in France and at night in New Zealand, Franck Cammas and eight of his crew took to the seas from Dunedin to return to the zone where Groupama 3 capsized.
Without Yves Parlier, remaining on shore to ensure the link between the Groupama team in Lorient and the men at sea, a motor boat measuring around 25 metres long propelled by a 1000 hp engine, is carrying them eastwards across seas, which are set to calm down progressively.
Contacted by telephone before he got too far from the New Zealand coast, the skipper of Groupama 3 had this to say: “The Groupama team in Lorient sent us a plan and a set of procedures, which should help us to right the boat again. We've got a trip of around twelve hours before we find it. If all goes well, we could be back on shore with Groupama 3 in tow in four days, most likely at Christchurch”.
Aboard the tug boat, we can well imagine that the crew are dividing their time between resting and preparing the righting operation. Ropes, chains, chainsaw, drill and diving gear must be readied.
It’s only once they get Groupama 3 back to shore that they will be able to finely assess the damage and then she will probably be loaded aboard a cargo ship bound for its base in Lorient, France.
For its part, the management division of Groupama has sent a message to their rescuers from the Rescue Coordination Center New Zealand, thanking them for the professionalism of their intervention.
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