Boat theft collides with Mother Nature

Published on September 13th, 2021

The farthest Graham Collins sails his boat from Halifax is along the coast of Nova Scotia, so he was stunned when he got a call from the U.S. Coast Guard on September 10, asking if he was sailing through the eye of hurricane Larry.

Officials with the U.S. Coast Guard’s rescue co-ordination center in Boston had been trying to reach Collins but were unable to get hold of him, so they started contacting people on his emergency contact list. After Collins got off the phone with his friend, the Coast Guard call came through.

“They told me that my personal locator beacon had been activated and was showing a position in the middle of hurricane Larry,” explained Collins. “They asked me if that seemed at all reasonable and I said, no, it doesn’t. It should be on the boat and the boat should be happily tied up at the Armdale Yacht Club (in Halifax, NS).”

But Collins’s wife, Jill, came to a different conclusion when she went down to check on the 10.6-metre sailboat named Secret Plans. “She calls me from there and goes, ‘Yeah, there’s no boat,’ with a lot of profanity, which is unusual for her,” he recalled.

After looking over the mooring ball and the bridles, Jill told her husband everything was in perfect shape, meaning the boat must have been untied, so Collins called the Coast Guard back to let them know “this is probably legit.”

Collins explained the personal locator beacon needs to be manually activated by pulling out the antenna before holding two buttons at the same time to turn it on, so it was deliberately set off.

The beacon was about 630 kilometers southeast of Halifax when it was activated. Eventually, the Coast Guard stopped receiving a signal from the beacon as its battery had died.

The following morning, the Coast Guard set out to search for the sailboat but came up empty-handed. Later in the day, one of the planes involved in the search spotted a flare, which was consistent with the flares from Collins’s boat, but couldn’t locate the vessel.

Just after 10 a.m. on September 12, the Coast Guard decided to suspend the search for the boat.

“The conditions at the time of the search were pretty harsh,” Petty Officer Ryan Noel said that day. “Winds were 70 knots and the waves were 40 to 50 feet, with visibility for less than a mile.”

Collins said since his family only used the former racing boat for near-coast cruising, it didn’t have a liferaft, but it was fully equipped with food and water, which would’ve lasted a person at least a week at sea. After hearing the Coast Guard had suspended its search, Collins had very few words for how he was feeling.

“The vibe I get is to not hope for anything,” he said. “I’d love to have the boat back, but something bad enough happened that they concluded it would be better to be arrested than not be saved.” – Full story

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