Anatomy of Disaster - Season 2 Episode 5 - Ferocious Oceans

Ойын-сауық

Witness an ocean liner ripped in half by killer waves and sail aboard a yacht tossed about on the open seas
in fifty foot rollers as Anatomy of Disaster explores the origins and cycles of nature's most destructive force
- the power of the ocean that drives intense storms an immense waves.
Enormous energy, caused by storm winds, reverberates out across the surface of the ocean in what we
experience as waves. And woe to ships or coastal residents in their paths! From an Australian sailing
couple's struggle to survive a tropical storm, to an attempt to save crewmen off a cargo ship before it
crashes into North Sea cliffs, Anatomy of Disaster takes us to the world's worst storms and the mariners
who face them. We'll examine cyclonic storm surges, gigantic ocean rollers, and killer rogue waves. To
better understand these incredible forces of nature, we'll stand onboard an oil tanker as it breaks up and then
barely escape as it plunges into the depths, cling to a catamaran in a South Pacific Typhoon, and watch a
ship off Mozambique sink after being hit by a rogue wave.

Пікірлер: 895

  • @TerrenceTerryLynch
    @TerrenceTerryLynch2 жыл бұрын

    I was on a navy ship for six months the USS New Orleans it was gigantic had roughly 5500 people living on it it was all Marine Corps helicopters five harier jets it was awesome I love that life my dad told me just before he passed away he said in the Gaelic language the word lynch my last name means mariner I had wished he had told me that as a boy because I always wanted to be at sea ,deep down inside ,thank you for showing me this God bless all travel the seas.

  • @michaelrubio7070

    @michaelrubio7070

    Жыл бұрын

    What year were you on the new Orleans

  • @spikenomoon

    @spikenomoon

    11 ай бұрын

    @@michaelrubio7070 I know what ya mean. My last name is Pike and I always wanted to be a Giant Fish.

  • @michaelrubio7070

    @michaelrubio7070

    11 ай бұрын

    @spikenomoon I was on the ship Uss new Orleans

  • @rogerscottcathey
    @rogerscottcathey4 жыл бұрын

    Those chopper rescuers are a special breed.

  • @rogerscottcathey

    @rogerscottcathey

    4 жыл бұрын

    20:12 The look on that robot's face and its frantic actions says it all: "DANGER!! GET US OUT OF HERE!!!!"

  • @billcar6805

    @billcar6805

    3 жыл бұрын

    Inbred?

  • @jaimevalencia571

    @jaimevalencia571

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you th

  • @nathenholzl6970

    @nathenholzl6970

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rogerscottcathey 0000p0à

  • @patchthesinclair5896

    @patchthesinclair5896

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@billcar6805be good!

  • @musamor75
    @musamor756 жыл бұрын

    This is an excellent documentary, quite breath taking at times. We "land crawlers" just don't have an inkling about the tremendous courage of these hardy and brave seamen, who often risk their lives for our sometimes superfluous creature comforts. It's tricky looking onto such terrifying episodes without feeling like an armchair voyeur. I'm considering subscribing, if only for the fact that our family crossed the ocean six times by boat (big, comfortable sealiners) with the exception of a small cargo, the Princess Emilia (33,000 tons- a little baby by modern standards) in mid-October 1969, sailing from Montreal, Canada, into the heart of the Mediterranean Sea. We did strike a mid-Atlantic storm which has left a strong memory in my mind. The small vessel was tossed like a matchbox n the sea. The bow dipped under the water for several hours, and as a foolish 11 year-old youngster I went on deck with my buddy Thomas. I certainly wouldn't ever do that again. Thank you for posting this thrilling documentary ; I have thoroughly enjoyed it, but nearly did it in my pants during some of the scenes. God protect ALL seamen. The seas are the greatest force in Nature to be reckoned with. We land dwellers are just careless, reckless fools. One day we'll pay the price if we don't change.

  • @sheilamacpherson4948
    @sheilamacpherson49485 жыл бұрын

    My grandfather was a Canadian Merchant Marine. He was torpedoed in WWII in the North Sea. This makes me respect him even tho I never knew him. I'm proud. These are real men.

  • @TFrills

    @TFrills

    3 жыл бұрын

    He didn't survive?

  • @gabriel7664

    @gabriel7664

    2 жыл бұрын

    People don't understand what merchant sailors went thru in WW2! I recommend the book "Mathews Men". It's about the men of the town of Mathews near Cape Hatteras. But i believe it shows the bravery of the countless merchant marine sailors. I think you'd really enjoy it. I hope you decide to read it.

  • @hypticnosisgaming

    @hypticnosisgaming

    Жыл бұрын

    Cap

  • @sydneyconcerts902

    @sydneyconcerts902

    Жыл бұрын

    this is true i was the torpedo

  • @MisplacedTexan
    @MisplacedTexan3 жыл бұрын

    By “coincidence” the strange light brought rescue to the Forbeses. I love “coincidence”. 🥰❤️

  • @Kimjongil.
    @Kimjongil. Жыл бұрын

    The power of the sea is mind blowing 😳

  • @fredjones7307
    @fredjones73074 жыл бұрын

    I was quite surprised when they abandoned ship.. during the infamous Fasnet tragedy people lost their lives abandoning ship and the boat was found afloat the next day. I will only leave my boat if it sinks under me..I thought they'd stand by up weather giving some shelter rather than execute what I thought was an extremely dangerous rescue..

  • @brianbrett5955

    @brianbrett5955

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are right, if the boat isn't breaking up and sinking, it's more dangerous to attempt a rescue than to ride out the storm. As long as you aren't close to land.

  • @th-h6224

    @th-h6224

    3 жыл бұрын

    We don't see all the circumstances, but at first sight the katamaran looks pretty safely afloat. No ropes launched o the rear to keep the boat straigt downwind etc. Don't leave your ship unless your ship leaves you seems a reasonable advice but once in panic our reactions become irrational. Any information if the katamaran was found later and in which condition?

  • @spider0804

    @spider0804

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@th-h6224 If you had continued watching for 5 minutes they say the catamaran floated 80 miles and was fine, they reboarded and brought it home. Case of boat being stronger than the crew...

  • @svvalhalla7631
    @svvalhalla76313 жыл бұрын

    "All experience is good experience" Thats a good motto.

  • @MrFifadon1

    @MrFifadon1

    4 ай бұрын

    Reminds me of Loki

  • @markmilan8365
    @markmilan83654 жыл бұрын

    Captain Ed Oonk and the man that went outside to repair the window are really heroes.

  • @markmilan8365

    @markmilan8365

    4 жыл бұрын

    Captain of the Sedco/BP 471

  • @dianehodgkinson7113
    @dianehodgkinson71135 жыл бұрын

    As a Brit, and an ex member of the RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) - Is ALL Volunteers - The UK does not have 'paid' lifeboat crews, unlike most other countries! (it is also the oldest lifeboat / sea rescue service in the world!) - and as another comment mentioned - PLEASE get it right - Coxswain, is pronounced Coxon!

  • @joeroganjosh9333

    @joeroganjosh9333

    4 жыл бұрын

    The RNLI are, for me, legendary.

  • @clivehorridge

    @clivehorridge

    4 жыл бұрын

    Diane Hodgkinson Respect! And everyone, please give generously, seriously 👍🏻🇷🇴🇬🇧

  • @linns.179

    @linns.179

    3 жыл бұрын

    If you agree rescue means catching a line and going for a violent swim/dragging....cheers!

  • @RossLougheed
    @RossLougheed3 жыл бұрын

    What a story! Glad the couple made it to safety.

  • @setapart_beauty7110
    @setapart_beauty7110 Жыл бұрын

    The ocean is a beautifully terrifying place. From giant waves to underwater volcanic explosions and so on. It's crazy how We have the technology to destroy the earth with a single push of a button yet we still can't conquer the ocean

  • @johnpringle9967
    @johnpringle99676 жыл бұрын

    What an amazing story of struggle and survival this couple experienced and survived! I too have sailed deep draught mono-hulls and cats, having owned both. It brings to mind the old controversy between mono and multihulls. Many people have survived massive storms in deep keel mono-hulls even after being completely rolled over, even endwise, repeatedly, totally dismasted, and living to tell the tale. But in a multihull, even though they are harder to flip because of a larger footprint, once over... you're done for. I have often longed to try the big water sailing, but the argument as to ship design would bother me to this day. A cat or trimaran sails flat and has the floor area of a small bungalow and is top (above water) heavy. A draught keel almost always is at an angle and has much less living space but is bottom (underwater) heavy. It 's a tough call. What's even more amazing about this story is that the couple got their cat back, upright, 2 weeks after abandoning it. Unbelievable.. And on they sailed. Remarkable. I have often said to myself in dark times on a sailing boat that old Gordon Lightfoot phrase, " Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours?"

  • @pauljnolan1000

    @pauljnolan1000

    3 жыл бұрын

    It's not a tough call. Catamarans are unseaworthy. Anyone who is dumb enough or foolish enough to go offshore in one should be left to his fate. If you believe you need the room of a condo, buy a condo.

  • @johnpringle9967

    @johnpringle9967

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@pauljnolan1000 In reply to your comment, you are absolutely right! When all is lovely on water, having a small cottage with a mast is like a dream come true, but when things go bad, I'd rather be in a deep keel mono-hull. Me and my best Bud, way back when, tried to take our small Cat from Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada out to Isle Royale on the American side of Lake Superior (the Lake that sank the Edmond Fitzgerald) and in spite of many really dangerous things we had done in our lives, that failed trip turned out to be the closest either of us ever came to death. We sailed, stupidly right into an oncoming 7 day storm and spent the entire 7 days after somehow making and land, clinging to the windward side of the Sibley Peninsula camped on a shore that was basically a collection of rocks the size of a Volkswagen to a city bus. From that tropical shore, the terrain immediately went straight up 1500 ft. We fought, for hours, climbing 45-60 degree troughs to peaks, and then literally falling almost weightless, windward hull right out of the water, and leeward half out of the water on the way down, down the other side landing like an airplane with no landing gear into the next trough. Not only that, but at the peak, the wind tried to knock us over, and in the trough, there was no wind because we were so deep down. It was at least 25-30ft from crest to trough. I was on tiller, and any movement more than a half an inch the wrong way would have flipped, or pitch-poled us. That's the sort of experience that, if you survive to tell the tale, makes strong believers in deep keel, mono-hull sailing craft. Thanks for your comment.

  • @Urconnect

    @Urconnect

    3 жыл бұрын

    A

  • @TerrenceTerryLynch
    @TerrenceTerryLynch2 жыл бұрын

    I give those men and women of the Coast Guard so much credit for saving that couple on the yacht the Lord was watching over them I hope they recognize that

  • @konewone361

    @konewone361

    Жыл бұрын

    It wasn’t the Coast Guard. It was Royal New Zealand Navy. HMNZS Monowai.

  • @nonyafkinbznes1420

    @nonyafkinbznes1420

    10 ай бұрын

    And when people don't make it I curse the lord for failing them, the bastard.

  • @lknanml
    @lknanml6 жыл бұрын

    This episode was really well done. Good info with real and re made footage. A sailor myself I can say even beautiful days can turn dark so fast you will say this only happens in the movies. Water can be immensely powerful and weather can change on you so fast out there.

  • @ingridakerblom7577

    @ingridakerblom7577

    4 жыл бұрын

    I live on an island, I have really bad motion sickness, I avoid going anywhere with a ferry or a boat.. just nooo. I have experienced as worst 35meters/sec winds at open water, hurricane strenght, accompanied by about 14meter waves, in the morning that day, the sea was like a mirror, not a single disturbance on the surface, well that changed in like 30min maximum, it was crazy, and this is just one of many storms I've experienced at sea, so it's not like you aren't used to it.. after that, no, just no, i can't travel with that company anymoore, it was HELL, people throwing up everywhere, and I mean everyewhere, all the shops restaurants etc was closed bcs the furniture & inventory (mostly glass bottles & cans) flew everywhere. Cars & lorries tipped on their sides on cardeck.. Needless to say, I was scared, so f***ing scared. One of the other normal daily standard ferry rides to the main land, it's ALWAYS stormy, you wouldn't think it would be THAT bad, but more than once I have woken up by being thrown from the bunk bed straight down on the floor. And those times you start to think; well M/S Estonia sank 1994 in 33m/s winds, now its almost the same weather conditions, at almosy the exact same location..... no just noooo. I go with a plane, or not at all nowdays.. 27y of atleast 5 stormy rides a year, I have learned, take the plane, it's worth it in every way & don't travel as mutch to not strain the climate in vain.. I'm happy at land, where the ground dosen't move, with my cats 😊

  • @Oakleaf700

    @Oakleaf700

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@ingridakerblom7577 Princess Victoria Disaster {1950's} sounded like this.... Have you tried 'Transderm Scōp'? ...I really helped me with motion sickness... I live on an Island too.... albeit a biggish one, but it meant sea{ferry} travel a lot if you wanted to get to Europe with a vehicle. I hated it when it was rough...because of the vomiting all around.

  • @ingridakerblom7577

    @ingridakerblom7577

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Oakleaf700 I'm using Scopoderm, (in the depot band aid format) the only thing that works, but really hate them. The side effects suck. You feel bad, but in a different way & can't get anything done bcs of how tired & you get.. a wierd side effect it how much it dires up the mouth.. making it's really hard to eat, and you get sick really easily, by catching some influensa bcs of it. And you are in a bigger risk of dental cavities (if you use them alot or longer time). I've tried it all thats avaliable. This is the only thing that helps with the motionsickness.. they are kind of expensive here aswell..

  • @tonyowens2887

    @tonyowens2887

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@ingridakerblom7577 😊

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields685210 ай бұрын

    1991 in Marshfield, Mass. me and my fiance loved right on the seawall, sliding glass doors open and 10' deck right up against the seawall, the perfect storm, the no name storm, we stayed too long, lucky to be alive, waves were crashing over the house, beautiful deep green Atlantic ocean waters running down the windows on every wave, and it wasn't even high tide yet, then a wave picked up a boulder and sent it through the sliding glass doors, ok, time to go, but we waited too long, we got in the car but the streets on both sides were unpassable, so I backed the car up and incline about a 100' from the house, we watched the house get swept away completely, water came up to the bottom of the doors but just high enough to keep engine running, the next morning only the foundation and our king sized mattress in the foundation were left. It was amazing, even though we lost everything, time heals all wounds

  • @antwan37
    @antwan377 жыл бұрын

    It felt good to learn that the couple recovered their boat/home.

  • @theccpisaparasite8813
    @theccpisaparasite88132 жыл бұрын

    In any fight between a man and the sea, the sea wins whenever it likes. At the snap of fi ger. Having lived by the ocean for my whole life, I can describe it in but four words: beauty, majestic, allure, power. And yet, the words are too small. God, I love the sea. But, you've got to respect her.

  • @cujoemblakka1041
    @cujoemblakka10416 жыл бұрын

    I spent 6.5 years commercial fish, plus some trips on navy vessels, being a seaman you know when you have enough, you may fight the seas, the boat, may sink but life is precious, storms are no to be played with, also been in quite a few of those. I think they should build more capsize proof vessels. I had a friend that got ship wreck 6 times and lost at sea, a few times he was the only survivior. He finally gave it up, and by then most people, thought that he wasbbad luck.

  • @darrenpyle808

    @darrenpyle808

    4 жыл бұрын

    How dose he have bad luck he was the only person who survived.

  • @EShirako

    @EShirako

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@darrenpyle808 Not that that fellow HAD bad luck...they thought he CARRIED bad luck. A human 'ill omen', if you will. "Oh crud, they assigned us Sinks-Each-Week Bob?! We're doomed!" Except that they would mean it, after he was the only survivor of several sinkings and whatnot! Maybe he had REALLY good luck, but sailors are a superstitious lot! Don't rename a ship without good reason, don't sail in these conditions, don't sail when I have only one sock left in the locker, etc etc etc... The ocean is dangerous business, and the people who survive working/roaming the ocean for a few years tend to be pretty serious folk, too! But in the smallest way of looking at it...even if he has GOOD luck, if he's not sharing it with his fellows, then they can't rely on it to save them when whatever ship-aimed-bad-luck that follows him comes calling, so...nope, they wouldn't want someone like that among themselves if they could help it!

  • @jangeisler6123

    @jangeisler6123

    Жыл бұрын

    Naaahhh, mate it was the ships that was not seaworthy, or a inexperienced captain, I myself got resqued in the Atlantic Ocean north of Iceland in 2005, it was the ship in my case, both the captain and myself got resqued by one of the greatest coastguards in the world.....

  • @leeholmes9962
    @leeholmes99623 жыл бұрын

    It's great that there is hero's around the world people that will rise to the challenge these kind of people have my respect for life 💪✌💛🇬🇧👍

  • @DRSURYAPRAKASHSURGEON
    @DRSURYAPRAKASHSURGEON3 жыл бұрын

    I like these type of documentaries..

  • @codprawn
    @codprawn5 жыл бұрын

    Bill Deacon was a true hero who gave his life to save others. The useless crew of Green Lily share the blame. Too busy trying to save their luggage! And why didn't they drop the anchors to slow the drift?

  • @spider0804
    @spider08043 жыл бұрын

    That catamaran @10:00 was riding out the waves quite happily, and was nowhere near tipping. Never even saw more than a few inches below the waterline. Boat stronger than the crew.

  • @stevehewitt2484
    @stevehewitt24846 жыл бұрын

    Geez......I’m 8 minutes in and on the edge of my seat !!

  • @magzsara9892
    @magzsara98925 жыл бұрын

    A ship at sea is always in danger.. So the green light and final wave saved the day.. I would have been first off that Cat.. Well done chaps

  • @jerrylafever6549

    @jerrylafever6549

    5 жыл бұрын

    I rescued a couple of guys on a 30' Sloop after their boat was badly damaged and the seas were still very rough. It was very hard to get close enough to transfer them. They wanted to stay with their boat. I gave them provisions, then at the last minute they changed their mind. We sank it because it was a navigation hazard and not worth salvaging.

  • @mickwinters8484
    @mickwinters84845 жыл бұрын

    AWESOME!

  • @viliamedyer2282
    @viliamedyer22822 жыл бұрын

    GOD THE ALMIGHTY IS THE CARETAKER

  • @charleshedricks9123
    @charleshedricks91236 жыл бұрын

    Maybe you missed the fact that the rudder was disabled by a wave, just as they were taken off the boat. When I was in the US Coast Guard, we rescued quite a few experienced boaters off rough seas due to injury or damage to their vessel that made it unsafe. On the flip side, we recovered more than a few that were beyond rescue.... The sea is a dangerous place for even the most experienced crew.

  • @jerrylafever6549

    @jerrylafever6549

    5 жыл бұрын

    This is exactly what I tried to tell someone who made an idiotic comment. It's obvious anyone who makes stupid comments, have never experience the Ocean at its worse.

  • @ronaldstarkey4336

    @ronaldstarkey4336

    5 жыл бұрын

    No chit... lol

  • @waynelee7169

    @waynelee7169

    4 жыл бұрын

    Very true - they did the smart thing - take the rescue while you can - dying is easy - no amount of personal property is worth a life - boats are disposable. Anyone here, having spent enough time at sea knows that, despite all preparation and precaution, the Sea is going to test your metal - thrilling and terrifying all at once - no avoiding it - Having sailed the seas off the Western Australian coast for 55 years, I am well aware of just riding it and praying to Poseidon, Neptune, God and anyone else that may listen - many times a rescue would have been accepted - even just to stop the battering my body was taking.

  • @joshlower1

    @joshlower1

    Жыл бұрын

    That catamaran would have two rudders it wouldve been fine.

  • @matt1985matt
    @matt1985matt4 жыл бұрын

    8:20 "And I guess I was buggered" :D

  • @frostroxie2740
    @frostroxie27405 жыл бұрын

    I would think it’s.... the stronger the storm the larger the waves...!!!

  • @lunes-1
    @lunes-13 жыл бұрын

    Great video,keep it up. !

  • @oceanways
    @oceanways6 жыл бұрын

    Great survival stories at sea!

  • @terrencevincent9015

    @terrencevincent9015

    6 жыл бұрын

    Whale Media I

  • @leewood842
    @leewood8425 жыл бұрын

    great documentary

  • @lambertoazzi7883
    @lambertoazzi78834 жыл бұрын

    Similar situation, 2001 with my wife on our Centaurus 30' cat... +7m waves and 65 knots of wind recorded by a cargo ship we met... The boat, Russian built in Riga, didn't really flinched and the self-built windvane kept steering for 3 hellish days... after that we decided to go for a 200 miles run on a 3m2 storm jib and wing-shaped mast of 5 m2 surface, surfing those giant breakers straight into the West African continental shoal until the Moroccan harbour of Jorf Lasfar. Man!... surfing those mountains at dusk running 15 knots of average speed is something I'll never forget!

  • @Jimbo898

    @Jimbo898

    4 жыл бұрын

    Kind of puts things in perspective.

  • @sonjanovotny

    @sonjanovotny

    3 жыл бұрын

    Those crazy times are unbelievable! 3 days, wow! How hard was it to add your windvane to your catamaran? Our autopilot takes a lot of battery power, but we didn’t think we could use a windvane.

  • @barnybrogan7850

    @barnybrogan7850

    3 жыл бұрын

    Respect man

  • @edbudgen6704
    @edbudgen67042 жыл бұрын

    Dam..all you captains and crews have my utmost respect..mother ocean can be brutal..

  • @allanhunnicutt8887
    @allanhunnicutt88872 жыл бұрын

    Turn the tankers into submstines, sailing just under the waves.

  • @Utubin

    @Utubin

    Жыл бұрын

    Great idea👍.

  • @darrenfredpascoe3865
    @darrenfredpascoe38654 жыл бұрын

    We need all oil to be shipped in double hulled ships. Woof

  • @trevorstewartblaikie
    @trevorstewartblaikie11 ай бұрын

    The energy of nature can be tamed.

  • @alexburke1899

    @alexburke1899

    10 ай бұрын

    Some of it can be with dams, sea walls and geothermal power, but good luck taming a super volcano or a big asteroid though lol. Earth took a big hit every 50k years for about a billion years and although it slowed down there’s still some asteroids out there with our name on it:) It’s a major reason it would be nice to stop warring on earth over stupid things like religion, if we combined our efforts as countries we could better defend ourselves from space threats and actually do some more meaningful space exploration going.

  • @lburns7952
    @lburns79522 жыл бұрын

    Yep, no, no, no......................The thought of a wave hitting me on a beach sends me into heart palpitations. I have a ridiculous fear of water.

  • @MrFifadon1

    @MrFifadon1

    Жыл бұрын

    When the titanic sank they were in freezing, shark infested, pitch black water with the ship sinking around them i often think about that

  • @GoatrazziRoom
    @GoatrazziRoom2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing Documentary

  • @lydiacabrera6251
    @lydiacabrera62513 жыл бұрын

    Watching this video during the Covid-19 pandemic from Azusa California 2021

  • @jamesmontroy5244
    @jamesmontroy52443 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of my USN days waves slamming into the hangar bay doors. Or waves hitting the port side and washing onto the flight deck with 60 knot winds.

  • @moment23
    @moment23 Жыл бұрын

    That light was GOD ❤

  • @marksonanything
    @marksonanything4 жыл бұрын

    Very good epsiode!

  • @raymondj8768
    @raymondj87685 жыл бұрын

    wow i cant believe they got there sail boat back how lucky is that !!!

  • @potatolew4495
    @potatolew4495 Жыл бұрын

    I don't understand what they would not have started to pump oil off the compromised tanker before trying to tow it. Seas were calm and vessel was semi stable, as opposed to avoiding an environmental disaster they expedited its happenings. It has been proven over and over these so called experts lack one key trait that most of us regular mariners have, COMMON SENSE.

  • @dreoneful
    @dreoneful4 жыл бұрын

    Im so glad they were able to find the boat

  • @julianlawrence-ball2279
    @julianlawrence-ball22793 жыл бұрын

    That was very good. I enjoyed that

  • @jimhurley714

    @jimhurley714

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's what you momma said !!!!

  • @luiscarlos-gv8py
    @luiscarlos-gv8py2 жыл бұрын

    Anatommy # eu o mar mais verdade. o mar e arriscado tanto p voltar parabens salvaor

  • @pamperedcamper1834
    @pamperedcamper18343 жыл бұрын

    The Flying Dutchman has balls of steel!

  • @EamonnSeoigh
    @EamonnSeoigh5 жыл бұрын

    Reef up, batten down, secure everything, set up a beam reach, keep moving.

  • @barnybrogan7850

    @barnybrogan7850

    3 жыл бұрын

    Beam reach.....mmmm

  • @morganfreeman5171

    @morganfreeman5171

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@barnybrogan7850 you don't want the wind coming from behind, trust me !

  • @mostlikelywedoitservices6926
    @mostlikelywedoitservices69262 жыл бұрын

    The troth is a freaking scary place to be. Been there and literally walk on the walls/ bulkhead without touching anything for ballance. Some really scary shit. I remember hooking up a hammock in the A Gang shop lengthwise of the ship. When at rest workbench and draws just to the right of me and workbench taller than my laying position. when in the seas. My God the draws and bench top were rolling over top of me. This was in the USS Saginaw 1188. The ocean does only what she want at will. She can eat ships like candy.

  • @lejink
    @lejink6 жыл бұрын

    They were scared, the boat was damaged, they realized they were in way over their heads and decided to accept the rescue. I'm sure there's countless thousands of people lost at sea who faced similar circumstances and decided to decline help and it costing them their lives Could they have survived? well the boat was found, who knows if it would have made it if they were on board though Sometimes you have to swallow your pride

  • @FubarGuy666

    @FubarGuy666

    5 жыл бұрын

    That's called Darwinian Evolution. The more idiots that die before breeding the better.

  • @stanislavdaganov574

    @stanislavdaganov574

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@FubarGuy666 Apparently, this Evolution does not work. Idiots are approaching 100% of population.

  • @dronewild3234
    @dronewild32345 жыл бұрын

    Activate their distress beacon but then don’t want to get off their Catamaran lol!!! Walking on the deck no worries, no need to call for help!!

  • @zackalamuddin2186

    @zackalamuddin2186

    3 жыл бұрын

    It was there home and all there belongings lmao

  • @wombatdk
    @wombatdk5 жыл бұрын

    Luckily these days it's less likely to get hit by storms without warning. Satellite-based weather forecasts and the ability to get said forecasts even on small sailboats make it a bit of a moot point.

  • @Steve1734
    @Steve17347 жыл бұрын

    And we get upset if the bus is late!

  • @sandymoonstone855

    @sandymoonstone855

    7 жыл бұрын

    What do you mean "we" white man?

  • @SBCBears

    @SBCBears

    7 жыл бұрын

    That black woman who was bitching at the bus stop last week.

  • @rafaelpfranco

    @rafaelpfranco

    7 жыл бұрын

    What do you mean "white man", punk? And then, it's whites fault there is racism everywhere.... and what do "punks" do? This, ladies and gentleman... THIS!

  • @sheenaalexis8710

    @sheenaalexis8710

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@rafaelpfranco exactly! It's okay to be racist aslong as it's against whites apparently. Do that to a black person and they lose their mind's. But they can call us "white man" etc.. they are JUST if not more racist then whites even are now a days. Racism is racism don't complain about it if you are no better.

  • @gudlukkay

    @gudlukkay

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@sheenaalexis8710 bitch do you know what racism is.

  • @goutvols103
    @goutvols1035 жыл бұрын

    If I was the catamaran, I would not have let them back on. They abandoned me.

  • @maqsoodkhan5142

    @maqsoodkhan5142

    5 жыл бұрын

    You are metal

  • @FubarGuy666

    @FubarGuy666

    5 жыл бұрын

    goutvols 103 Your comment reminded me of a great book: The Ship That Died of Shame by Nicholas Monsarrat. They also made a couple of films based on the story. If I was the catamaran, after letting them back on I would send a waterspout thru the sea loo while they were sitting on it. Technically known by submariners as "getting your own back..."

  • @Tomas-ml9nv

    @Tomas-ml9nv

    5 жыл бұрын

    I identify as a catamaran and I would do the same

  • @igitha..._
    @igitha..._3 жыл бұрын

    ...I love how understated the damage to the environment is as a result of the fuel leaks into the waters...

  • @unitedwestand5100

    @unitedwestand5100

    3 жыл бұрын

    Even worse is the fecal matter washing in off the streets of San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Deigo, etc.

  • @EShirako

    @EShirako

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Out of sight, out of mind" at its finest, I suppose..? Though if they can't do anything for that, then worrying about it changes nothing so I guess that does also make sense. How can you purge the tanks usefully during an emergency? Especially without your in-an-emergency vessel not being given new gear for the purpose, really...how would you keep it from being uselessly-contaminated by salt water in the purging? Discard it how once you had it, if it were salt-spoiled fuel? The problems look simple, but those /details/ are where the problems are found. Slurping out fuel means putting in /something/ into their tank in exchange for the fuel, or else it may suck in the salt water if it's low enough in the water...send over your own air, maybe? How to put the air in without including salt-water? Are there explosive risks to trying that? How to get the ship's crew to use the purge-tool during an emergency without it being an industrial-standard process? Would you be environmentally-determined enough to go over to a sinking ship/in a storm for yourself to test it out? Etc etc etc. Problems could stand to be solved, though...so hopefully we will figure it out some day!

  • @b4thefall
    @b4thefall Жыл бұрын

    We had our trawling gear starboard bogged in mud with huge Mornington Island waves violently crashing over us. Thank GOD we got out of it alive.

  • @gregbolitho9775
    @gregbolitho97754 жыл бұрын

    nice goin cap an crew, went fishin an brought back a cupla aussie fish eh!

  • @geniemeadows5122
    @geniemeadows51227 жыл бұрын

    People on pleasure trips are pains messing with the elements and put others at risk trying to rescue them!!!Same as those who climb mountains.

  • @micvili7527

    @micvili7527

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like you never lived a day in your life

  • @geniemeadows5122

    @geniemeadows5122

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Mic Vili...I am an oldie now. Left home at 16 and was alone. However it's downright silly to take risks for thrills in my opinion anyway. Some rescuers have died having to go retrieve people in bad situations. One of my sons is a bit of a thrillseeker or was (calmed a bit haha) but I almost held my breath when he did some pursuits.

  • @jc9724
    @jc97243 жыл бұрын

    You all know who sent the light 🕯️

  • @Romin.777

    @Romin.777

    2 жыл бұрын

    The one with your initials. :)

  • @121five
    @121five7 жыл бұрын

    13:16 the foresail is unfurled? Made for T.V., I love it!

  • @homefront3162

    @homefront3162

    4 жыл бұрын

    So is my Foreskin

  • @uniquejyllinge
    @uniquejyllinge5 жыл бұрын

    The Green Lui should probably have locked the tow wire to some of their anchor chain to allow for some pressure on the towing wire to be taken on by some anchor chain.

  • @timothyblazer1749
    @timothyblazer17497 жыл бұрын

    You can always get into trouble out there.. that much is true. However if you have a good storm setup, you will be fine in nearly 100% of situations. Including this one. I wasn't there, and I am sure they did their best, but if they had had a good para-anchor, and a good bow roller setup, they could have deployed it to keep their bow into the waves, and then almost nothing could have flipped the boat. Storm Tactics by Lin and Larry Pardey (people with well over 150,000 sea miles) is the gold standard for yachties, and I wish 100% of cruisers would do everything they say. I have, and I have been in situations as hairy as this, sitting below (strapped in mind you) having some port and a smoke after settling her down.

  • @wongchankaisopon2444

    @wongchankaisopon2444

    7 жыл бұрын

    what does that tell you

  • @pieterw4809

    @pieterw4809

    7 жыл бұрын

    Correct. In particular multihulls are suitable for the use of a parachute anchor, because they can lift their daggerboards to reduce lateral lift and leave the boat to the waves. "In the book The Parachute Anchoring System Joan Casanova describes Tortuga Too's encounter with a genuine ESW - extreme storm wave." Besides, I would never abandon my cat as long as she is floating, probably it is even a more comfortable place to stay using a para, than on a navy ship. These people were unnecessary exhausting themselves.

  • @johnnyllooddte3415

    @johnnyllooddte3415

    7 жыл бұрын

    youre insane.. the oceans are littered with a million sunken vessels from drunken sailors like you

  • @johnnyllooddte3415

    @johnnyllooddte3415

    7 жыл бұрын

    if you think a parachute anchor and lifted keel are going to help you in 30 foot swells and hurricane winds youre beyond bonkers

  • @wongchankaisopon2444

    @wongchankaisopon2444

    7 жыл бұрын

    legally they did ,this stuff about salvage rights is just bullshit

  • @Romin.777
    @Romin.7772 жыл бұрын

    The green light was devine intervention.

  • @azuraylounes2269
    @azuraylounes22695 жыл бұрын

    Ask trawlers about rough seas

  • @sean19
    @sean194 жыл бұрын

    Crazy

  • @ZacVaper
    @ZacVaper5 жыл бұрын

    Tug Boat breaks a line and says "fuck it", we tried, let's go back to the bar and watch this on t.v.

  • @stevemacdaddy9909
    @stevemacdaddy990911 ай бұрын

    I must be one lucky SOB. In 2000 I king crab fished in the Bering sea in 30 ft waves on a 110 ft ship. No problem.

  • @benfranklin9981
    @benfranklin99817 жыл бұрын

    Leaving a small to medium sized boat to board a ship in the middle of a cyclone / taifun / hurricane in the open sea is very dangerous. If it isn't sinking, or at least capsized, it's not a good idea to even try to do that. As for the Pacific being peaceful, I once sailed from Guam to Madang, PNG - there were three tropical revolving storms banging around in the tropical N. Pacific near Guam - 1 to the North, 1 to the East, and 1 to the west. These storms Guam gets, an average of 9 taifuns a year, are amazingly destructive. The buildings all look like bunkers, with flat concrete walls and roofs. They are built with lots of rebar. Trees are very few and far between, because the storms shred them and bear them off to the sea. The Taifuns near Guam are very violent, and you can never predict just where they will go. They will trend between W to N, and may loop back.

  • @robertgunn1393

    @robertgunn1393

    6 жыл бұрын

    People work hard and decide to go for their dream of sailing..all of you so called sailing experts can kiss my ass passing judgement on anyone who accepted rescue in a scary situation. Negative comments always come from braggadocio shitheads. Fuck you!!!

  • @you2tooyou2too
    @you2tooyou2too4 жыл бұрын

    3:25 would it be more controlled hauling tension if the tug pulled on the anchor system instead of the rigid deck cleats?

  • @garychandler4296

    @garychandler4296

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep, there are a lot of tricks that can provide cushion. Many farm boys know to put a tire in line with a tow chain. Why? It creates a soft pull that spreads out the iinitial jerk, keeping the inertia from being lost in a quick slam and technically increases the pull. I once pulled out a tractor trailer from an icy parking lot with my pickup that way. Had there been no old tire there, it would have been impossible!

  • @MrHAPPYHAWAIIAN
    @MrHAPPYHAWAIIAN3 жыл бұрын

    A functional boat and he asks for help? Not like it was sinking. Did the engine work?

  • @TurnerRentz
    @TurnerRentz6 жыл бұрын

    I personally am near to tears seeing that giant, vast, beautiful ship die. I swear she almost brought a tear to my eye. Ok, fuck. Whatever. I'm still crying. Should have pumped her down where she stood, right away. The oil load was breaking her back. Bad call for whoever was on environmental watch, the fucking rip currents there blow it all ten fucking miles before you even see it..... Next time, let the man who knows how to repair the ship, captain the ship. The laws of salvage apply. Would you were to have pumped her down, all hands abandoned ship. She's yours. This is one sailor's vote. But out here. My vote counts.

  • @bobcat1

    @bobcat1

    5 жыл бұрын

    You are right!! Ship should have been pumped down as first priority. That was a idiot call to tow a damaged fully loaded ship.

  • @patriciabrooks5838
    @patriciabrooks58386 жыл бұрын

    It is well known by experienced sailors that the safest place is on the boat if it is watertight.

  • @MrHAPPYHAWAIIAN

    @MrHAPPYHAWAIIAN

    3 жыл бұрын

    Right?

  • @earthtonestreeservice878
    @earthtonestreeservice8786 жыл бұрын

    THANK God for the fella who saw a strange light?.?...was it an alien orb.

  • @NathanChisholm041

    @NathanChisholm041

    4 жыл бұрын

    Help from above possible!

  • @mkunes2502
    @mkunes25025 ай бұрын

    As a veteran Cpt, I’m always shocked by people who regale me with survival stories, almost always caused by their own buffoonery. And they do it so proudly!! ?? People abandon perfectly good boats. You should climb UP to your liferaft, not down.

  • @Jimbo898
    @Jimbo8984 жыл бұрын

    Like that whole thing with Ramtha wasn't a mirracle. God in the house.

  • @jessstone7486

    @jessstone7486

    3 жыл бұрын

    TOTALLY! I was thinking the same! Father was on the scene, at the ready!!!

  • @mastermouth

    @mastermouth

    3 жыл бұрын

    What about all the people who end up not rescued at sea? God hates them, or is asleep, or busy elsewhere?

  • @TRICK-OR-TREAT236
    @TRICK-OR-TREAT2367 жыл бұрын

    AMAZING THE ASSININITY OF SOME PEOPLE ! DO I REALLY WANT TO LOSE MY BOAT OR MY LIFE ?

  • @FubarGuy666

    @FubarGuy666

    5 жыл бұрын

    Judging by your poor spelling, I would prefer your boat.

  • @JS-qg1ie
    @JS-qg1ie4 жыл бұрын

    24:17 holy crap!

  • @805gregg
    @805gregg4 жыл бұрын

    Always stay with the boat, the boat came through it fine without anyone aboard

  • @WhiskeyBeerBack
    @WhiskeyBeerBack5 жыл бұрын

    Good thing they waited to fall off their "none" sinking boat (home) until the rescue ship arrived!

  • @americannobody27

    @americannobody27

    4 жыл бұрын

    John You mean their boat that was damaged by a wave to the point it could no longer be steered, that "non sinking boat"? Hmm? Lemme see? In the middle of the ocean during a intense storm, with waves five times bigger than the boat, when the boat is damaged to the point you are essentially dead-in-the-water, what would you do? Besides crap yourself and cry, you would be trying to get off that boat!

  • @FubarGuy666

    @FubarGuy666

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@americannobody27 I see from your comment why you are a nobody

  • @denverferrell5217
    @denverferrell5217 Жыл бұрын

    People, animals, insects, nor humans or the earth evolved! God created it all!

  • @joetorca77
    @joetorca777 жыл бұрын

    Learning from hindsight is there anything to be learnt from this? As I plan to one day sail the seas and opting to make an many safe decisions as possible and learn from as many before me what is there to learn from the Catamaran scenario. What decisions could have been made?

  • @CHRIS198490

    @CHRIS198490

    4 жыл бұрын

    steel boat or alu

  • @linns.179

    @linns.179

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep. Check the weather forecast well in advance.

  • @outbackeddie
    @outbackeddie4 жыл бұрын

    I was on a boat once. I think it was a canoe. It tipped over. I don't get in boats anymore.

  • @MrJdsenior

    @MrJdsenior

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm assuming you don't swim, since it apparently traumatized you so badly? Or did you forget to enable the sarcasm font...you bad bad boy. ;-)

  • @romella_karmey

    @romella_karmey

    3 жыл бұрын

    When my aunt and other family relatives went to province or countryside in my country, her boat almost got tipped over. She fell in the water.

  • @outbackeddie

    @outbackeddie

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@MrJdsenior actually, the alligators in the lake had something to do with my decision.

  • @MrJdsenior

    @MrJdsenior

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@outbackeddie Strange coinkidink, we were sailing the Hobie on a Central Fl lake called Lake Jessup, which I found out shortly after I pulled this bone head maneuver. I let the kids swim out in the middle. Later (months) my son and I were cruising down the shoreline with at a good clip, but it was surface calm (windward) so about the only noise really going on was the flying wires singing a bit. All of a sudden there was a tremendous commotion coming out of the weeds a bit in front of us, and THREE gators were scurrying into the water and swimming out at break neck speed. We must have snuck up and scared the crap out of them. I know it got my attention, because the first was about 12', the second, about 13', and the third I would swear was within a couple of feet of the length of the 16' Hobie we were on. The last one must have been ancient, the sort like virtually the largest we used to see at Gatorland, with the mouth line that undulates all the way back. Needless to say we never swam there again (MAN, did I get chills, because it was the first thing that hit my mind then, them swimming previously). Luckily most gators will pretty much leave you alone unless some idiot has been feeding them, which happens occasionally. They tend to be as scared of us as we are of them, thank god. Long story short (well, I tried) your decision was light years ahead of mine. I could relate a canoe story too, during an Indian Guides trip, where my little brother was scared to death of the gar fish (not at all dangerous) and there was a horsefly involved, and dad was swimming down into a spring for his wallet. Good times Cheers

  • @aflaz171
    @aflaz1712 жыл бұрын

    I would stay on the catamaran, I am scared of water🤣

  • @TurnerRentz
    @TurnerRentz6 жыл бұрын

    Know the elements, never underestimate the elements, and always know that the elements can get out of control. - Is anyone else besides me curious as to how the Flying Dutchman saved his rudder with thirty giant paris hilton sized tanks of salt water poured straight down the middle of all of his motherboards. conductive. ?

  • @buckethead1473
    @buckethead14733 жыл бұрын

    Speaking of fetch they would have to “fetch” me a clean pair of draws

  • @sheshe1stlady

    @sheshe1stlady

    2 жыл бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @vargohoat9950
    @vargohoat99506 жыл бұрын

    i was looking for a manila line from that tug captain, a manila stretches and so decreases the stress on a tow line. i didnt see a manila at all and so ofc a straight steel cable snapped...maybe i just didnt see the line but thats a fatal error in high seas not havinga buffer manila rope

  • @nikolaospeterson2495
    @nikolaospeterson24957 жыл бұрын

    It really is a sad sight to see a vessel head for the bottom!

  • @muvvacrusher4137

    @muvvacrusher4137

    4 жыл бұрын

    My vessel is never sad when it heads for my mrs bottom

  • @MANPORT555
    @MANPORT5557 жыл бұрын

    abandoning your sail boat in a storm and taking to a raft is death. sail boats with heavy keel are made to take just about any sea and i've laid to hull many times. in the rescue of the couple and their having to put on harnesses is crazy. no one goes on deck in any storm without a harness and clipping in immediately and having a blinking safety light on the body.

  • @FubarGuy666

    @FubarGuy666

    5 жыл бұрын

    Very true, but cats don't have a heavy keel, they don't need one to be stable... Just a bunch of blinking idiots!

  • @jerrylafever6549

    @jerrylafever6549

    5 жыл бұрын

    I agree 100%. I was thinking the same thing, walking upright on a boat without a teder line? Not on my boat.

  • @nivid01
    @nivid014 жыл бұрын

    The guys on the oil tanker. Let's sleep below deck even though the ship shows signs of breaking in half.... as the ship sinks: Wait, I have to go back below deck for my life jacket and my bag!

  • @jamesofallthings3684
    @jamesofallthings3684 Жыл бұрын

    Erik sails a 34 foot mono hull through seas like that for fun. Could have just hung out for a day and been fine.

  • @luvbig41
    @luvbig413 жыл бұрын

    Wow Catamarans seem durable and are able to stay afloat.

  • @imagination3005
    @imagination30053 жыл бұрын

    This gives me nightmares

  • @TFrills
    @TFrills3 жыл бұрын

    Why so many dislikes? It's good! Maybe they mean, "dis I like" :)

  • @sailingcitrinesunset4065
    @sailingcitrinesunset40654 жыл бұрын

    "Cox'n" !!!!!!

  • @daz989

    @daz989

    4 жыл бұрын

    Sailing Citrine Sunset cocks Wayne 🤣🤣

  • @jessstone7486

    @jessstone7486

    3 жыл бұрын

    I noticed that, too. I wondered why a person (maybe an editor) with nautical knowledge hadn't caught that, prior to the final cut.

  • @dzyanist

    @dzyanist

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jessstone7486 ..Same here..

  • @joseywilds3133

    @joseywilds3133

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bunch of 4 year olds going crazy over a word!!!!

  • @JS-qg1ie
    @JS-qg1ie4 жыл бұрын

    It’s clever how the yacht docked itself 80miles away.

  • @unclepizza2000

    @unclepizza2000

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah you can do all that now with GPS and autopilot. I'm joking, but maybe this is possible now? Unmanned (sorry, unpersonned) vessel, if able to still navigate, takes itself to nearest mooring, anchors a half mile out and calls the local marina

  • @KateDenthimamai

    @KateDenthimamai

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@unclepizza2000 And then pops a bottle of cold bear while contemplating of the great adventure it just survived.

  • @izzzzzz6
    @izzzzzz62 жыл бұрын

    a powerful laser pointer would have been a good tool to have in situations such as this.

  • @phapnui
    @phapnui7 жыл бұрын

    Guess I shouldn't take my 11 foot styrofoam Kool sailboat out on the ocean...

  • @markcharleswashington233

    @markcharleswashington233

    4 жыл бұрын

    One little man took a two-masted 12 footlong ketch from feather River

  • @markcharleswashington233

    @markcharleswashington233

    4 жыл бұрын

    Oops didn't finish from feather River Montana through the gulf of Mexico and truck to the up the, the boat only weighed 42o pounds, so we could drag it up a riverbank he could row from the inside and only had two hatches. My friend Kenny ichi horry sailed 32ft catch all around the world made of aluminum beer kegs , got here from Japan in 1970 something in a 19 foot boat that is still in point Reyes behind the gas station, he took a pedal boat from Hawaii to Okinawa with rice soy sauce and fishing gear and a 5-gallon propane cooker rice and a water.

Келесі