FOG. Fog is one of the more dangerous of weather conditions offshore. June is known as “Fog Month”.
Depending on where you are offshore a very large concern is Steamers, big, dark, quiet fast ships.
Along the Channel East of Cape Cod and Nantucket many fishing boats as well as big ships (The Andrea Doria) get rammed or just rolled under with zero
chance of escape.
It is my belief that this is exactly what happened to the Scalloper Navigator out of New Bedford in January 1977.
My gut says she got rolled under by a freighter while running to the lee of Great Point Nantucket with a deck-load of Scallops where they’d have put
a Drag on the bottom and laid too and cut out in calm water while the storm they were in blew itself out.
I’ll begin here now with a survivors tale of my own.
I forget the year but I was working the deck of a new Heavy Weather Boat named the Kathy & Maureen out of Boston Mass. in the dead of Winter.
We had sailed under Storm Warnings, sustained winds of 34 to 63 kt (39 to 73 mph) or higher.
It was not uncommon for boats of this caliber to do so.
Once we reached the fishing grounds work began, the watch on, watch off doing the mind and body numbing work of what life aboard an Offshore Scallop
Boat could be.
I was working the Starboard rail and we had just set the drags back out for another tow. I grabbed my basket and began picking threw the pile.
In heavy weather we set into the Sea’s and Wind and Skipper’s would usually wait until the boys cleared the deck and were safely in the cutting
house before making the turn to run back down the tow.
This tow however Eddie, the Skipper did not wait.
Looking back across all those years I can now pretty well pit together exactly what happened that night.
As the Skipper turned to Port away from the weather I believe the drag on my side of boat hung up on a lump or boulder. We were over extremely heavy
bottom after all, rocks, hills and valleys.
As Eddie turned the boat she leaned her shoulder into the sea and I hears a loud slap on the hull.
Looking forward I saw a wave coming over the wheelhouse and black water racing along the rail towards me.
Suddenly as quick as a snap of the fingers I was over.
The boat rolled away from me and I watched the rail and the scuppers go by little more than arms length away.
Under the glare of the high intensity over head flood lights shining off the froth of the wave I then saw the rolling shocks, the keel coolers and the
zincs on the hull. If the savage tide of this area had been at any other angle I would have been swept away.
As the boat reached the peak of it’s roll away from me I could hear the wheel (propeller) of to my left, Wump, Wump, Wump.
The boat came back at towards me and it looked like I’d end up under it where I’d surely go thru the wheel.
But the rolling shock went by me, again no more than an arms length away and the the scuppers raced by again and disappeared under the water and next
it was the rail.
The rail dashed under again and I felt myself rise on the face of a wave like at the beach I body surfed back to the deck.
SLAM, I hit and rolled all around until I got my arm around the tow wire running two feet off the deck from the winch.
I was safe, I was home!!!
How long does it take a boat to roll from Starboard to Port and back? Not long!!! I had been overboard for mere seconds. In my mind it seems an
eternity now....
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PiratesCut
edit on 08-19-2021 by PiratesCut because: words