Hawaii: Dramatic Rescue for Woman, Daughter, Cat and Tortoise
In a joint mission, the US Coast Guard and US Navy have rescued a woman, her daughter, a pet cat and tortoise from their yacht after they were caught in weather conditions generated by Hurricane Gilma about 925 miles east of the Hawaiian Islands.
Published 3 months ago
Source: US Coast Guard Press Release
Joint US Navy/US Coast Guard Rescue Mission
Joint Rescue Coordination Center Honolulu watchstanders received a distress alert from an emergency position indicating radio beacon (EPIRB) at 12:33 p.m. Saturday August 24 originating from a position approximately 925 miles east of Honolulu. JRCC Honolulu watchstanders issued a SafetyNET broadcast, conducted a query of vessels via Automated Mutual-Assistance Vessel Rescue (AMVER) and the Maritime Intelligence Fusion Center and launched an HC-130 Hercules airplane crew from Coast Guard Air Station Barbers Point.
After arriving on scene, the airplane crew sighted a 47-foot sailboat, the French-flagged vessel Albroc and heard a mayday call on VHF-FM channel 16 from a 47-year-old woman aboard the vessel reporting that she and her 7-year-old daughter were beset by weather and in need of rescue. The woman reported there was a deceased man on board.
The Hercules crew could not establish direct communication with the woman but saw her light two distress flares and observed the sailboat drifting and taking waves over the beam. On-scene weather conditions were 6-foot seas and 20 mph winds.
JRCC Honolulu watchstanders requested assistance from the Navy’s U.S. Pacific Fleet and U.S. 3rd Fleet, which diverted the crew of USS William P. Lawrence (DDG 110), an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer homeported in Pearl Harbor, to the yacht’s position. Additional assistance was requested from the master of an AMVER-registered vessel, the Seri Emperor, a Singapore-flagged, 754-foot liquid petroleum gas tanker that was approximately 290 miles south of the sailboat, an 18-hour transit.
Deteriorating weather conditions
The Seri Emperor arrived on scene at approximately 5:20 p.m. Sunday August 25, but the crew were unable to safely remove the woman and child from the vessel due to deteriorating weather conditions ahead of Hurricane Gilma approaching the area. The tanker crew remained on scene until 5 a.m. Monday, when the William P. Lawrence arrived.
With seas greater than 25 feet forecast within 12 hours of their position and the damaged condition of the Albroc, the William P. Lawrence had a six-hour window to safely conduct small boat recovery operations. A small boat crew from the Navy ship launched and rescued the woman, girl, a cat and tortoise from the sailboat.
“I am extremely proud of the crew’s professionalism in planning and executing the safe recovery of two persons at sea on a disabled vessel in worsening conditions,” said U.S. Navy Cmdr. Bobby Wayland, commanding officer of William P. Lawrence. “My boat crew – in particular the coxswain – demonstrated deft boat handling and good judgement in approaching the distressed vessel and transferring the survivors. I also appreciate the remarkable coordination and information provided by the USCG throughout the entire operation – very cool to see the Navy / Coast Guard team work together so smoothly.”
Due to adverse on-scene weather conditions, the crew could not safely recover the deceased individual from the sailing vessel. On-scene weather conditions at the time of the rescue were 8 to 10-foot seas and 15 mph winds.
“While saddened by the loss of the sailing vessel’s master, I couldn’t be prouder of the combined efforts of the U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy who saved the lives of two other passengers,” said Vice Adm. John Wade, commander, U.S. 3rd Fleet. “I’m particularly grateful for the professionalism exhibited by the crew of USS William P. Lawrence who executed the rescue flawlessly under extremely dangerous conditions.”
Teamwork and coordination
“Through tireless planning, coordination and teamwork, our watchstanders pieced together the key elements needed for such a dynamic search and rescue case,” said Kevin Cooper, search and rescue mission coordinator, JRCC Honolulu.
“The use of an EPIRB was also crucial and allowed our aircrews and partners to pinpoint the sailboat’s location. We are grateful the crews of the Seri Emperor and William P. Lawrence were able to reach the mother and daughter, who were caught right in the path of Hurricane Gilma.”
The sailboat remains adrift approximately 1,000 miles east of Honolulu.
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