Monday, October 29, 2012

She’s Gone

She’s probably the most prominent victim of the storm Sandy. The replica tall ship “BOUNTY” sank in the storm off the North Carolina Coast. And just a few weeks ago she was a guest at the Eastport Pirate Days.

 

 

14 rescued, two missing from storm-hit tall ship Bounty

(AFP) – 2 hours ago

WASHINGTON — US Coast Guard helicopters plucked 14 crew members of a replica tall ship called the HMS Bounty out of the sea in the midst of Hurricane Sandy Monday, but two others were missing.

The daring rescue in waters off North Carolina came after the crew abandoned ship, donning cold water survival suits and life jackets and launching two canopied life boats into the howling sea.

The Coast Guard, responding to a distress call, dispatched a C-130 airplane and established communications with the crew. That plane was later joined by two MH-60 rescue helicopters from Elizabeth City, North Carolina.

The first helicopter "hoisted five people into the aircraft, and a second helicopter arrived and rescued nine people," a Coast Guard statement said.

"The C-130 Hercules aircraft remains on scene and is searching for the two missing crew members and a third Jayhawk crew is en route to assist search and rescue efforts.

"The 14 people are being flown to Air Station Elizabeth City where they will be met by awaiting emergency medical services personnel," it added, while lowering the crew size to 16, having earlier stated 17 had abandoned ship.

A Coast Guard spokesperson said crew members were being interviewed to try to determine who was still missing, and "where we need to search."

The ship, meanwhile, was reported to have sunk, the spokesperson said.

The owner of the vessel, which was built for the 1962 movie Mutiny on the Bounty with Marlon Brando and has also featured in Pirates of the Caribbean with Johnny Depp, said he lost contact with the crew late Sunday.

The US Coast Guard command center in Portsmouth, Virginia subsequently received a distress signal, confirming the ship was in trouble and locating its position.

"The vessel was reportedly taking on water and was without propulsion," the statement said, noting that weather at the scene featured 40 mile-per-hour (65 kilometers-per-hour) winds and 18-foot (five-meter) waves.

The current HMS Bounty is a replica of the eponymous British vessel known for the mutiny that took place in Tahiti in 1789.

The vessel was approximately 160 miles (250 kilometers) west of the eye of hurricane, which as of midday Monday was packing sustained winds of 90 miles (150 kilometers) per hour.

At 1500 GMT, the storm's epicenter was 205 miles (330 kilometers) southeast of Atlantic City but hurricane force winds extend out 175 miles (280 kilometers) from the center, the National Hurricane Center said.

 

 

 

Over here we haven’t noticed too much of the storm yet. We are having some wind, but very little rain so far. It seems that most of the impact is directed towards  the inlands, but things can still change.

We’ll keep you posted as we go along.

 

What is new on the UPS-story?

Well, this morning I checked out status and it said that the delivery address is in a “remote area” and that delivery would happen on Tuesday. However, when I returned from a shopping trip across the border, the package had arrived.
The cost of this 2000km detour was 36 Dollars which is just 150% of what the part costs. Ironically, I had to get the package across the border again for sending it up to Houlton,ME. The cost of that was just $5.35.

 

I have now secured a physical address across the border to send packages to.

Enough is enough!

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7 comments:

  1. The Bounty will become part of the lore of the Carolina coast. Lets hope the USCG can find the other two before it is too late!

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  2. So sad about the ship but why didn't they take it far out to sea or bring it into port or whatever they do with ships to protect them? Sure hope they find those other two crewmen. Not often your package gets to take an around the world journey to get to you.

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  3. That's too bad about the Bounty. I guess you were already aware The Bounty was built in Nova Scotia for the film Mutiny on the Bounty.

    Apparently, the crew were warned about the hurricane but chose to ignore it and sailed anyway - pretty foolish.

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  4. They sure lost money on the delivery of that package! We heard about the ship on the news a little while ago. It was sure a beauty.

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  5. Very sad about the Bounty. Built in Lunenburg.
    No power meant no bilge pumps. Not sure how power was initially lost. Trying to "outrun" the storm doesn't always work.

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  6. Found more info on your post than we could on television so thanks for that.....

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  7. what a shame!..so sad about the ship going down!

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