Please select your home edition
Edition
Exposure Marine

The missing sailboat and its bold recovery

by Alana Stillitano 28 Aug 2020 04:19 BST
Finding Eclipse © Alana Stillitano

The sun had finally peaked through the clouds after days of wind and stormy seas. A young man spotted a blue speck in the distance after searching the Atlantic for days from a sea plane. He zoomed in closer and he saw it. His home, his sailboat, the Eclipse. After three long days of searching, there she was, perfectly upright and resting in the mud a short distance from the shore.

It is not every day that Sea Tow Key Biscayne Captains Peter Dominguez and Bill Rychlicki are called because of a missing boat. Their most common calls at the locally-owned on-water assistance franchise include providing tows, jump starts, fuel deliveries and more to boaters. However, with more boaters out on the water this season than ever, especially newer boaters, there is much to be learned about safety and protocol while at the helm.

Just three days earlier the wind was whipping across the ocean water, sending salty sprays onto a young Phil Gutowski's face as he walked to the marina where his Tayana 42, Eclipse, was moored. But while on the tender heading towards mooring #91, where the bright blue hull of Eclipse would peak through - he saw nothing. The boat was gone.

Thousands of questions run through a person's mind when you cannot find your boat after you anchored it in: Had it been stolen? How could she have broken free? How could she have made it through the mooring field without hitting Anything else?

Days were passing but to no avail. Eclipse was nowhere to be seen and hope was dwindling fast.

Finally, Phil was able to search for Eclipse while on a seaplane. The skies had cleared and a spec was visible a few miles away. After flying a little closer, Phil and the pilot could see the distinctive blue hull. The hatches were still shut, the battery voltage was good, and the bilge was nearly dry! A dream come true.

Capt. Dominguez and Capt. Rychlicki had to wait until high tide to pull Eclipse to freedom. They dragged her about one mile across the shallow sand and rock of the shore until the water was deep enough for her to float on her own; lifting the weight off Phil's shoulders.

Although it seemed as if all hope was lost, Phil never gave up. With the help of the boating community and Sea Tow Key Biscayne, the Eclipse returned home just as it left. While also learning a hard lesson - always make sure your vessel is tightly secured with the proper lines before you leave the dock or mooring.

Related Articles

UEA academic set to sail from Africa to Australia
Prof Maren Duvendack is sailing from South Africa to Australia to raise money for UNICEF Prof Maren Duvendack, an intrepid academic from the School of Global Development at the University of East Anglia (UEA), is sailing more than 8,000 km from South Africa to Australia to raise money for UNICEF. Posted on 14 Oct 2023
Sailing (mis)adventures on the Norfolk Broads
Aground on an ebbing tide with no engine and a sail that couldn't come down The rain hammered down on us that night and I lay awake in my slightly damp sleeping bag, remembering the start of the trip which had begun with so much excitement and anticipation just six days earlier... Posted on 17 Feb 2023
Don't just cook - Create wonderment!
Fabiola has an ingrained love of cooking and has made endless connections with local food providers Fabiola has an ingrained love of cooking and has made endless connections with local food providers across the islands. She's explored many local markets so she can create mouthwatering dishes for her guests using her own recipes. Posted on 24 Oct 2022
How Atlantic isolation helped during lockdown
One sailor's experience of routine on board helped prepare them The Atlantic Ocean is an utterly brutal environment. Piercingly hot sun, 30 foot waves and sleeping quarters eternally damp from spray - this is not your average day at the beach. In 2018 my family and I embarked on a voyage across the Atlantic and back. Posted on 18 Jun 2022
One end to the other...
I got a sneak peak at the SV Delos Arctic trailer a while back, and swore to complete secrecy... Confession. I got a sneak peak at the SV Delos Arctic trailer a while back, and swore to complete secrecy, or face the long walk off a short pier... Posted on 20 Dec 2020
Celebrating Marvin Creamer's bold circumnavigation
A geographer and university professor who circumnavigated the planet Celebrating Marvin Creamer (1916-2020), a geographer and university professor who circumnavigated the planet without any navigational instruments in the early 1980s. Posted on 25 Aug 2020
Call of Ocean around the world journey complete
Szymon Kuczynski finishes his solo voyage The sailor left Plymouth on the 19th of August 2017 to go around the world in a non-stop journey around the three capes. In October his yacht Atlantic Puffin sailed into the Southern Ocean where he remained for 128 days. Posted on 18 May 2018
C-Tech 2021 SnuffAir 728x90 BOTTOMHyde Sails 2024 - One DesignPredictWind - GPS 728x90 BOTTOM