Skipper’s 80-knot storm rescue

3 min read
Puffin was rolled and dismasted in a severe storm, but rescue by a Taiwanese fishing vessel came sooner than expected.
Fortuna/GR2022
Herbert-Jones preparing for the ship-to-ship transfer
Fortuna/GGR2022

British solo skipper Ian Herbert-Jones, who was competing in the Golden Globe Race, was rescued on 11 April following an international search and rescue operation after his 35-footer was violently rolled and dismasted in a South Atlantic storm.

Herbert-Jones was approximately 900 miles north-east of the Falkland Islands when a severe low pressure system tracked over his position. Herbert-Jones was at the time the last competitor in the solo ‘retro’ Golden Globe Race, sailing in the ‘Chichester’ division after previously making a stop in Tierra del Fuego to repair his steering gear.

Before the storm hit, Golden Globe Race organisers contacted Herbert-Jones and advised him to sail south as fast as Puffin, his Tradewind 35 cutter, was capable of.

“So I followed their advice and sailed south as fast as I could, but the barometer just kept falling,” he recalled in a video interview with race organisers after making landfall in Cape Town.

“This was after 219 days at sea, it wasn’t our first gale, it’s not Puffin and my first rodeo! It was building up but it was manageable. And then somebody flipped a switch. It was biblical, Old Testament fire and brimstone stuff.”

Wind battered

Puffin was battered by winds of over 50 knots, with wind forecasts for the area showing estimated gusts of 70-88 knots, and a sea state of 6.5-7.5m.

“The boat was overpressed,” Herbert-Jones said. “I was down to bare poles and the steering system couldn’t cope with it, so I was hand-steering – or helping the windvane steering – but we were just tremendously overpressed and the boat kept rounding up, accelerating and getting laid flat on her side, taking tremendous amounts of water in the cockpit.”

Herbert-Jones says he was twice washed out of the cockpit on his tether by the sheer volume of water sweeping the decks in confused cross seas. He issued a Pan Pan, and made a satellite call to race control.

“While we were on that call the boat got hit by a breaking wave: it was like being T-boned in a car accident. And a couple of seconds later I came to and she’d rolled, we’d capsized.

“My world changed in an instant. I just flipped from Golden Globe Race circumnavigation, on my way home, to survival mode. I knew my boat was in serious trouble.”

Puffin had been dismasted, a hatch had been blown open, and the cabin was awash with water, as well loose floorboards and items from broken lockers. Herbert-Jones began working through the most immediate problems, including securing the hatch.

“I also turned the bilge pumps off – which I know is counter intuitive but I wanted to know if

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