Hi Matt, we have a little Pearson 26 and were taking her out for our first overnighter on Jun29. Left Poquoson and headed to Cape Charles, great sail across, good wind and purpoises following us about half the trip. I had checked the weather and gotten the usual afternoon/ nightly sporadic thunderstorm predictions so we anchored off shore about 2 mi in 17 ft of water. After dinner around 1130 my wife called me on deck after seeing the heat lightening. We noticed black fingers of clouds down near the water. By the time I removed the stern anchor and took it up front, tied it off, the storm was on us. No little waves for a build up, not a strong breeze of wind for a warning, it was all out hell from the onslaught. The first waves hit us spinning the boat around almost 360. I think thats when we lost the rudder, so for the next 4 hrs I sat in the cockpit holding a tiller with no rudder, but because of the situation I didnt realize it, I only knew the boat would never point into the wind for me. So we rode the storm out sideways. My mast light would reflect the tops of the waves as we came down in the troughs with the lifelines in the water. More than a few times we talked about how we would respond to capsizing. 3 times I had to go forward and lash down sails because they were taking a beating and pulling the boat over on her side. We had the Coast Guard on the phone standing by to launch in case we went in the water. Motion sickness set in after about an hour and made it that much worse. Finally around 430 in the morning we felt the waves getting smaller and passed out from complete exhaustion, when we woke up the Blue Moon was bobbing off Kiptopeke and the Concrete Ships about 5 miles down the Eastern Shore. Lost the rudder, dodger, swim ladder, starboard bow light and flag and pole. Since she has an outboard we were able to motor back in six hours on Saturday. I was glad we didnt run out of fuel!
Learned many lessons and are thankful we werent number 14 and 15 on the fatality list. Our prayers go out for the others and their families. We are very grateful to the big guy upstairs and our little boat for getting us through that mean freak storm.
All the best, Nate
Learned many lessons and are thankful we werent number 14 and 15 on the fatality list. Our prayers go out for the others and their families. We are very grateful to the big guy upstairs and our little boat for getting us through that mean freak storm.
All the best, Nate