Pneuma,
Seattle-Based Ericson 39, Lost on South Minerva Reef
November 21 – Minerva Reef, South Pacific
Pneuma,
the Ericson 39 from Seattle being cruised by Guy and Melissa
(no last name available) was lost Tuesday night while at anchor
at South Minerva Reef. The couple are safe. Minerva Reef is located
about 250 miles from Tonga on the way to New Zealand. It consists
of two open ocean reefs, which only fully break the surface at
low tide. Pete and Sue Wolcott of the Hawaii-based SC 52 Kiapa
report:
“Nine boats departed North Minerva,
about 20 miles from South Minerva, for Opua, New Zealand, on
Tuesday, leaving just two in the lagoon. The weather was relatively
benign, with overcast and 10-15 knots of breeze. The wind was
very shifty, however, due to the effects of a stationary front.
Three boats remained at North Minerva, which is about 20 miles
up from South Minerva.
“At about 2000 local time, we heard
Pneuma’s Mayday. We had been tuning up Russell Radio for
the evening roll call, but just happened to pause long enough
on the Puddle Jump frequency to hear Guy calling for help. We
were not the first to hear the Mayday, as it was heard over VHF
on another boat. But we were the first boat that could reach
Guy and Melissa by radio. We got them to an emergency frequency
to coordinate a rescue. The closest boat to them, Harmony,
their buddyboat, could not be reached by radio for several hours
after the grounding.
“After hearing about the situation,
the skippers of Scott Free, a Hallberg-Rassy from Marblehead,
Infidien, and White Hawk jumped aboard Scott
Free and motored through the night from North Minerva to
South Minerva. The women and kids on the three boats stayed behind
aboard White Hawk to be the communications boat. Once
the three skippers got to South Minerva, they left Scott Free
outside the tricky pass and dinghied into the lagoon to rescue
Guy and Melissa. Kela, a Colorado-based Sundeer 65 with
Kirk, Debbie, Braden, and Grady aboard, had been about 30 miles
from South Minerva when the Mayday went out, and were the second
boat on the scene. Guy and Melissa are now safely aboard Kela.
The crews of Kela and Harmony – the third boat
on the scene – spent yesterday and today salvaging what they
could.
“We are so sorry for Guy and Melissa’s
loss. They are great folks and able cruisers. We’re sure they’ll
be back out here soon. The crews of Scott Free, White Hawk,
Infidien, Kela, and Harmony did everything possible
to ensure the swift and safe rescue of the Pneuma crew.
We all draw comfort from that fact that there are such capable
and caring folks out here with us.”
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