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Dennis George was the name of man driving the whaler. He was
accompanied by Don Nazzal, a fellow RC volunteer. The Punnett is a
21'ARC. The boat was specifically chosen because it is reasonably low to
the water but I do not know how they got the man aboard. I believe it
was easier because a local windsurfer got to them prior to the whaler's
arrival, and the two men in the water managed to get him on top of the
board.
Best regards,
Dennis George
Nominated by John Riise, Latitude 38 Magazine
Here is the text of the piece we ran, written by "Elan"
owner Bill Riess:
Saturday, March 16, was one of those days you hope never happen.
When it was all over, everyone came through it almost surprisingly well,
and we all learned a few terribly important lessons.
To go back a few years, my wife always urged me to wear flotation,
and to insist that my crew do the same. But when we first raced our
Olson 25 in the early'80s, stubborn machismo reigned: only a wuss would
put on that stuff. Two drownings a few years ago - the woman who fell
from a Merit 25 returning from Vallejo, and Southern California pro
sailor Larry Klein in the Big Boat Series - helped change my mind.
Before the St. Francis YC's standard Sailing Instructions required
wearing personal flotation in their regattas, I had asked my crew to do
the same thing, and stuck to it about 95% of the time.
This past weekend on Elan, my Express 37, we dropped the jib after
finishing the second race of StFYC's Spring One Design Regatta. On the
way in, perhaps 200 feet west of 'B' buoy at the outboard end of the
StFYC starting line, we discovered a broken bolt on the fitting that
secures the port lower shroud to the chainplate, and quickly decided to
jibe to relieve the pressure on that side of the rig. One of our
trimmers that day, Richard Beauregard from Benicia, stepped in to help
handle the mainsheet, and I turned the boat's stern through the eye of
the wind. I recall seeing the main come across the centerline at full
tilt - and I saw Richard's back and legs sliding over the side before
anyone could get to him.
The sight of this person, my crewmember, face down in the water and
not moving, is an image I'll never forget. (Fortunately, the next time I
looked at Richard he was floating on his back, but clearly still
unconscious.) In the meantime, two other crew, Scott Sorensen and John
Kernot, jumped overboard immediately to help Richard. Scott, a
fireman/paramedic, was wearing full foul weather gear, deck shoes, and a
foam-filled PFD. John, also in foulies but barefoot, wore manually
inflatable SOSpenders. (After they reached Richard, Scott reminded John
to pull the cord to inflate the bladder and activate the flotation.)
When Scott and John got to Richard, he was still out cold, bleeding
slightly from a cut on the left side of his forehead. As Richard began
to come to, probably 10 minutes after going into the water, he struggled
to sit up, and began to lose more blood from the arterial wound in his
forehead. Scott immediately began to apply compression to stem the blood
loss.
While those of us on board were getting the mainsail down, Rick
Wallace, a boardsailor at Crissy Field, saw that something unusual was
happening, launched his board and was on the scene rapidly where he,
John, and Scott used the board to support Richard.
The St. Francis finish line boat, an RIB, arrived quickly, and with
some difficulty, was able to fish our three crew out of the water.
Meanwhile, another crash boat and the W.L. Stewart (StFYC's race
committee trawler) arrived on the scene. Expeditious, another Express
37, also stood by to assist if needed. The RIB then zipped back to the
St. Francis docks where an ambulance was waiting. Richard was loaded
onto a back board and sped off to San Francisco General's ER. The EMTs
who put Richard in the ambulance told people on the dock that they
thought Richard would be okay, and this was confirmed via cellphone half
an hour later by the attending ER physician.
Total time in the water for the three Elan crew was 15-20 minutes.
Scott and I hurried over to S.F. General, where Richard was kept
until a CT scan could be done. It revealed only water in his sinuses
from the time he was face-down. Twenty stitches later, he was discharged
to his wife, who had come down from Benicia. Hypothermia had definitely
been an issue as Richard's body temperature dropped to 86°F and was
just up to 96.8°F an hour later. However, Richard was well enough to be
up and around.
Sunday - not even a headache! - and went back to work on Monday.
Now about the lessons:
1) Always wear flotation when you're on the water. Richard was using a
red, air-filled Musto Regatta vest, one of the most comfortable PFDs on
the market, and plenty adequate despite not passing Coast Guard
approval.
2) If you use an inflatable PFD, make sure you have the
auto-inflatable version. When you're unconscious, a manually-inflatable
PFD is like not having a PFD at all.
3) Do MOB drills in which everyone has a specific task and knows
exactly what to do.
4) Make sure you have some kind of lifting tackle - a Lifesling, for
instance - both to keep the MOB afloat, as well as to allow that person
to be brought back on board. After a fairly short time in frigid Bay
water, John Kernot reported he could not have gotten himself back onto
the boat.
5) Everyone needs to know where the danger zone is and to stay clear
of it in case of an accidental or sudden jibe. The impact of the boom
coming across would have been gruesome, almost certainly fatal, if it
had hit Richard. The moving bundle of main sheet had enough force to
knock Richard down, where he believes he might have hit his head on a
winch.
6) Never think this couldn't happen to you. Richard has 30+ years of
sailing under his belt, and every person on Elan that day was also
highly experienced.
Finally, the heroes of the day were John and Scott, who without any
hesitation risked their lives to aid a crewmate. I'd also like to thank
and acknowledge Rick Willis and the StFYC race committee for their quick
reactions, as well as whoever had the good sense to call the S.F. Fire
Department for their EMT and ambulance. And a special thanks to the
ambulance crew and the staff at S.F. General for taking such good care
of Richard.
I'm sure others whom I may be overlooking also played a role in
preventing this serious event from escalating into a tragedy.
Be careful out there!
- Bill Riess
Sorry for the delay; I'm taking a week off from work and although I
am able to access and respond to work emails, I'm not in the office
until next Monday or Tuesday. Is that soon enough? If not, I could
probably talk someone through going through my files to get all the info
you need. Meanwhile, here's my best shot at answers to your questions.
(this information was also in the draft of the original article I sent
when I first notified you of this incident.) Your best source for what
happened on Elan will be Bill Riess, the owner. I could have sworn I
sent you his email/phone already, but my mind is a sieve these days.
Could be I MEANT to and didn't. I will do so when I get back. He will
also have the phone numbers for Scott Sorensen, John Kernot and Richard
Beauregard (the victim).
1. Name of boardsailor was Rick Wallace. I don't know Rick, but from
talking to people, he is also an Express 37 sailor and was watching that
fleet in particular because his friends were sailing in it that day.
2. Don't know, but will try to find out when I get back.
3. Name of StFYC race committee boat is 'W.L. Stewart'.
4. Don't know, but Bill would.
5. Bill Riess is a longtime racer and has a very good and experienced
crew. As I understand from talking to him, they very capably got the
boat under control even in the windy conditions of that day. A
complicating factor was the broken bolt holding one of the lower
shrouds, which is what caused the emergency jibe (that threw Richard
Beauregard overboard) in the first place. Again, Bill will be able to
tell you exactly what transpired on board before they could turn around.
6. Scott Sorensen and John Kernot jumped over of their own volition.
They were not ordered to go in by Bill or anyone else on the boat.
7. They were not attached to the boat by tethers or lines.
Again, if you're on a tighter deadline for this info than early next
week, let me know and I will get it for you.
Cheers,
John |