Please select your home edition
Edition
Armstrong 728x90 - Wing FG Board Range - TOP

Five sailors, missing two months, sail into Coquimbo, Chile

by Nancy Knudsen on 12 Apr 2010
Josee and Martin SW
Five sailors, missing on the sailing yacht the SS Columbia for nearly two months in the eastern Pacific, have turned up in Coquimbo. This includes the skipper Boguslaw 'Bob' Norwid and his wife, and their three student sailors - Canadian women Josee Chabot and Lisa Hanlon and Australian Mitchell Westlake.

Yesterday, (Sunday), the 13-metre sloop carrying the five, arrived safely in port in Chile – two months after it was scheduled to dock and was feared lost.

According to early reports, the vessel found itself adrift in the Pacific Ocean more than 1000 nautical miles off the coast, caught in the ITCZ or Doldrums. As the Captain travels with the VHF radio turned off, they were not in touch with other yachts and knew nothing about the disastrous earthquake that had hit Chile, or that there was a dramatic search underway to attempt to locate them.

Martin Neufeld, partner of Josee Chabot, said, after talking to his wife, 'I’m very, very relieved.' He had earlier received word from Foreign Affairs officials that the SS Columbia had reached safe harbour after arriving 'under the radar.'

His wife had told him that the captain refused to allow his sailing students access to the radio to try to contact friends and family to tell them they were all right.

Family and friends of the student sailors, who had paid around $3500 for the training voyage, which would enable them to achieve their Skipper's ticket, had had coast guard officers search up and down the coast of Chile, where the 13-metre steel sloop was likely to be. The vessel had left Salinas, Ecuador, Jan. 16th, with vague plans to arrive in Coquimbo, Chile, around Feb. 27, the day the earthquake hit. They had also put the word out among cruising sailors in the area, with no result.

Martin had been told by Josee that they planned to sail around the Galapagos Islands, though when documentation was later checked, Norwid hadn't paid the requisite fees or included the 1,800-kilometre detour in his official plans submitted to the coast guard in Ecuador.

However, all the time the search was underway, authorities, families and friends hesitated to be convinced that the vessel was lost was the previous record of the skipper. The Polish-French national Norwid routinely arrives 20 to 30 days late at his destination.

In 2002, the same SS Columbia, with the same captain, disappeared for 13 days on its way from Vancouver to Mexico before it finally arrived in Manzanillo.

By then, the U.S., Canadian and Mexican coast guards, as well as sailors up and down the Pacific coast, were looking for waitress Eva Petkovic and the rest of the crew. Upon their return, they explained that they had had to sit out a storm and wait in the middle of the Pacific Ocean for favourable winds

Vaikobi 2024 FOOTERJ Composites J/99PredictWind - Offshore App 728x90 BOTTOM

Related Articles

International 18s in the 1950s
A period of New Zealand-led design & innovation Following the first major change in the 18 footers from the big boats of the early 1900s to the 7ft beam boats of the mid-1930s, there had been no major change or innovations until the late 1940s
Posted today at 6:02 am
2024 J/70 North American Championship overall
Fernando Perez Ontiveros's Black Mamba triumphs Incredible conditions prevailed for four days and a full slate of 11 races at the 2024 J/70 North American Championship hosted by Vallarta Yacht Club in Nuevo Nayarit, Mexico.
Posted on 4 May
Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix Day 1
Aussie's come out firing on opening day After crashing out in the previous event, Tom Slingsby's Australia SailGP Team completely dominated the opening day of the Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix.
Posted on 4 May
Spirit & competition shine at Antigua Sailing Week
The 55th edition attracted 88 boats from 20 different countries The 55th edition of Antigua Sailing Week attracted 88 boats from 20 different countries and 750 crew from all over the world. Antigua Sailing Week is one of the most celebrated regattas in the sailing world; the 2024 edition added another great chapter.
Posted on 4 May
Clipper Race 11 - See ya Seattle, next stop Panama
The start of Race 11: #StayConnected with SENA Seattle bids farewell to the Clipper Race fleet as it departs for the start of Race 11: #StayConnected with SENA.
Posted on 4 May
20th PalmaVela Day 3
Advantage Galateia as Maxi class goes into final light winds Sunday Five times America's Cup winning Kiwi sailing legend Murray Jones, the tactician on the Wally Cento Galateia wears only half a smile when he rails against the suggestion that, for them, PalmaVela is a mere warm up before the Maxi season.
Posted on 4 May
The Transat CIC Day 7
Yoann Richomme on Paprec Arkéa over 70 miles ahead of Charlie Dalin The top trio on the Transat CIC solo race to New York from Lorient, France are charging towards the finish line averaging over 22kts.
Posted on 4 May
Boris Herrmann deploys weather buoy in Transat CIC
The scientific instrument will drift with the Ocean currents and measure climate data The scientific instrument will drift with the Ocean currents and measure data crucial for weather forecasting predictions and climate change monitoring.
Posted on 4 May
Armstrong Midlength FG Board redefines foiling
Armstrong Midlength FG Board gives you the freedom to define how you ride. The choice is yours Armstrong Foils have announced the new Midlength boards, they are epic for wing and prone surf among many other things. The Armstrong Midlength FG Board Range truly redefines when and how you can go foiling.
Posted on 4 May
La Grande Motte International Regatta preview
Final dress rehearsal for the Cats and Skiffs ahead of Paris 2024 The Nacra 17 World Championship along with the 49er and 49erFX European Championships is attracting 148 teams to La Grande Motte in the South of France for six days of racing.
Posted on 4 May