Having had to
abandon his 11-metre ketch Dumpling
after a collision with a huge white vessel the size of an oil tanker or
container ship three weeks ago, single-handed yachtsman Nick Cole has learned
that his badly damaged and disabled boat has been located and towed back to Madeira .
The Portuguese
authorities have identified two white vessels that were in the collision area
at the time, but the Falmouth Coastguard has refused to divulge the names
because it is “commercially sensitive.”
Boats under sail
generally have right-of-way over motorised vessels.
Cole was sailing
from Porto Santo in the Madeira group of islands to Portimão in the Algarve when
the collision occurred in good weather and in broad daylight.
“I was down below gloating over our progress,
writing the log, counting the days etc when there was a terrific crash that
threw me off my seat and the pans from the stove,” he told us.
“I raced for the
deck thinking, ‘Shit! The mast must have come down!’ But when on deck I was
confused by a huge white wall where there should have been sea and sky. It took
a second to realise I was in a collision.
“As the ship passed, I called her on VHF
to say we had collided and to ask if they could see me. They confirmed they
could see me, so I said I would assess the damage and get back to them.”
Having
established that Dumpling was in a
bad way, he called back but received no reply. The huge white ship just carried
straight on to the horizon.
Seven hours later
Dumpling was still afloat and Nick
had sorted the chaos on board as best he could. He had a beautiful moonlit
night all to himself - but he thought a storm might be brewing.
“The next
afternoon, after several failed attempts to make contact with other ships, a
tanker called the MV Everglades
answered and told me a force 8 gale with big seas were due in four to five
hours,” he said.
He realised he
would have to abandon Dumpling and
asked the Everglades
to pick him up. The Russian captain and crew were most obliging and hospitable during
the voyage to their destination in the northeast of England , but they were much delayed
in a queue of heavy shipping waiting to dock.
Nick, his wife
Sally and their twin sons, James and David, live in England
but still have a home in the Algarve .
The boys attended the International
School , Porches.
Nick built Dumpling by himself in England in the 1980s and sailed her to the Algarve before
opening a dental practice in Lagoa in 1990. A sturdy but unsophisticated
‘green’ boat, he extensively refitted her on the land in front of his home near
Silves in 2012 and sailed her to Porto Santo last year.
After the
collision on his way back to the Algarve , it was 12 days before he
finally stepped ashore, still feeling somewhat fragile but lucky to be alive.
Reunited with his
family in England , he made
contact with the British emergency maritime authorities in Falmouth . They in turn contacted the
Portuguese authorities who reported that a fishing vessel had sighted Dumpling adrift five nautical miles west
of Deserta Grande Island
in the Madeira Archipelago.
The fishing
vessel towed Dumpling to Funchal, the
capital and main port
of Madeira . Her future
has yet to be decided. Efforts to positively identify the ship that smashed
into her are continuing.
On board Dumpling before the crash
Alongside
the rescue tanker