The skipper of a yacht in difficulty made the right decision to call for aid, according to Mangawhai Coastguard skipper Roy Pearson. Photo / Coastguard Mangawhai
The skipper of a yacht in difficulty made the right decision to call for aid, according to Mangawhai Coastguard skipper Roy Pearson. Photo / Coastguard Mangawhai
A Coastguard skipper who helped rescue a stricken yacht battling 4m seas off Northland feared they would be “collecting bodies” had the boat’s engine not restarted.
The yacht had been heading back to Kawau Island from the Bay of Islands when it struck trouble off Cape Rodney.
It was battling 4m swells, winds gusting 30 knots, an engine that wouldn’t work, spilled fuel and broken gear. The crew were close to abandoning ship.
Mangawhai Coastguard skipper Roy Pearson told The Northern Advocate that the rescue on February 28 unfolded in some of the toughest conditions he had experienced.
Pearson was alerted about 4.45pm, and headed out with a crew of four from Mangawhai to support Coastguard Kawau.
They had managed to get the engine working again once rescue arrived. They then headed back north, but struggled without a headsail.
“We were just at the mercy of the ocean.”
“I told [coastguard] over the radio, I was like, ‘Hey, I’m going to go up the front. Keep an eye on me, and if I fall overboard, please come and get me’.”
Pearson said it was clear heading back to Kawau would be too rough in such conditions.
He said if it wasn’t for the engine being back up and running, he believed they would have been on the rocks.
“They were saying that they were about 30 minutes away from abandoning ship,” he said.
The Kawau crew arrived about 15 minutes after Mangawhai and checked that everything had gone to plan before turning back again.
Once the headsail was fixed, the yacht started its long slog back to Whangārei with Coastguard Mangawhai’s support.
Pearson said his main concern was the yachties’ wellbeing.
“They’d been out there all day, they were now tired, it was going to get dark, they were going to be out there for another six, seven hours. And so we decided to just follow them ... shadow them all the way to Whangārei.”
The crew took turns speaking to them every 15 minutes, giving words of encouragement and tips on steering.
“You could hear in the radio conversation in their voice, the anxiety levels were quite high,” Pearson said.
“We know they’re fatigued, they’re unable to make good decisions ... we just started to take some of those decisions off them so that they could just concentrate on keeping the boat going.”
They escorted the boat to Marsden Cove, bypassing Mangawhai because of concerns the yacht’s keel would be a problem over the shallow bar.
It was slow-moving, and Pearson said they did not get to Marsden Cove marina until after midnight.
Mangawhai Coastguard skipper Roy Pearson has told of the rescue in challenging conditions. Photo / Coastguard
“Even sailing across oceans and around the world, I’ve very rarely come across conditions like that.”
To get the pair and their boat together in the same place was a “win-win scenario.”
Pearson believed the boat would have made reached its destination had it not suffered broken gear.
“You know, [the captain] was 90% of the way there when things started to go wrong, and I think [they] showed incredible wisdom in going, ‘Things are going wrong, I need some help now’.”
The yachtie said they were “ridiculously grateful” for Coastguard.
“They’ve got to be feeling pretty proud of themselves.”
Brodie Stone covers crime and emergency for the Northern Advocate. She has spent most of her life in Whangārei and is passionate about delving into issues that matter to Northlanders and beyond.