
Last night I finally had a long conversation with Francesco. His story is so incredible that I hardly believed what I heard. After losing all the equipment in a storm the 7th of January he sailed for 12 days trying to find a boat for help, relying on the EPIRB only as a final resource. "I had nothing, immagine myself, the boat, the mast and two sails". Nothing means no water, food, GPS, glasses, auto-pilots, headlamps, medicines, ... "Without glasses and contact lenses I could hardly see the end of the cathamaran and at night there were no stars. I had a small compass with no light and the EPIRB in my pocket, that's it".
Since Francesco had no routing support he sailed right trough areas with 20 to 30 knot wind. "The waves were incredible, not too tall but steep and fast. Like cannon balls that I had to avoid... not for 3 or 4 hours, for days!".

Francesco explained that the crew of the cargo Norman Lady (Oslo) did a truly impressive rescue operation. The EPIRB signal was giving a wrong GPS position (!) so the cargo spent hours searching about 10 to 20 miles away from Francesco. They were about to give up when they decided to check an area where for a second they had spotted a small radar echo, something that might have been a dolfin. They tuned the radar in order to intercept small objects and after about 5 hours, in the middle of the night, not at sunset as we thought, they found Francesco.
5 comments:
Homage and honour to the Captain of beautiful "NORMAN LADY" and her crew! What a wonderful demonstration of solidarity, skill and human values!
To NORMAN LADY Hip Hip Hurrah!!!!!!
Very happy for the good outcome of this situation. For me it's nice to see that the good people on my former ship Norman Lady did the right thing!
Also it's funny to see my picture of the bridge used in this site!
Brgds
Christian Bråthen
bayer@organizer.net
Yes Christian, they did right things and a fantastic job! Thanks!
tous rassurés de te savoir sain et sauf et impatients de te voir de retour à Antibes pour que tu nous racontes ta fabuleuse aventure ! Daniel, Odile, Maxime et Paul
To francesco: We miss you already, you honoured us with your presence and it's been our gain having you onboard.
The Burden of Seacaptains
The Burden of Fathers
The Burden of Men
In the end it all comes down to one thing:
You can't run from the wind
You trim your sails,
Face the music and
Keep on going.
Well, You faced the music, trimmed your sails and kept on going.
What you did, Francesco, was fantastic. You survived when everything went wrong, an incredible test of psycological strengh and human endurance. You told me you like to test your limits, well you went far beyond the limits of most men and made it.
What is more difficult? To sail over the Atlantic without troubles or survive what you survived?
You have won a bigger price than the crossing. Next time you will make it. Bon voyage, Capitain!
The Doctor
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