NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Survival at Sea, Stove by an Orca
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2020 Jan 13, 09:07 +0000
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2020 Jan 13, 09:07 +0000
I read the book Survive the Savage Sea in the 1970 when it came out. I didnt read the book by the son though. It was very influential on my thinking about sea survival and voyaging by small boat at the time, even though it was many decades before I bought my own blue water cruiser. It says in the BBC article he fired up his radio and sent an SOS. I don't remember them having a suitable radio. At the time they might have had a 500kHz life boat unit, a 2182kHz "call buoy" or an HF ham rig, Marine MF/HF rigs were huge at that time and used loads of power so it is unlikely they had one. The nearest to an EPIRB was a 121.5 aeronautical beacon which relied on line of sight to a plane. I seem to remember he threw a sextant and a chart in the boat before they sank, and a knife which was the most crucial thing to their survival. Bill On Mon, 13 Jan 2020 at 03:48, Frank Reedwrote: > > Here's a story of a schooner in the Pacific sailing from the Galapagos to the Marquesas that was sunk by a killer whale: > https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200108-how-to-survive-being-shipwrecked-by-whales > > They all survived in a little dinghy, and there's a point where they were able to estimate their latitude by sighting Polaris (not much detail in the article but you get the idea). As I started into the article, I was waiting for the part about the EPIRB but then in the fifth paragraph I realized why there was no EPIRB. The article is a good read by itself, and it's such a low key advert that I find myself interested in buying and reading the book on which it's based. > > Frank Reed > >