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Teen sailor Abby Sunderland is missing.

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  • Teen sailor Abby Sunderland is missing.

    Hope she's OK...

    Thursday, June 10, 2010 9:43am PDT

    Emergency rescue effort is launched for teen sailor Abby Sunderland


    A rescue effort has been launched in hope of finding Abby Sunderland, 16, who set off her emergency beacon locating devices from the southern Indian Ocean early this morning.

    Sunderland, who had been attempting to sail around the world alone, endured multiple knockdowns in 60-knot winds yesterday (Thursday local time) before conditions briefly abated.

    However, her parents lost satellite phone contact early this morning and an hour later were notified by the Coast Guard at French-controlled Reunion Islands that both of Sunderland's EPIRB satellite devices had been activated.

    One is apparently is attached to a survival suit or a life raft and meant to be used when a person is in the water or a life raft.

    Abby's father struggled with emotions and said he didn't know if his daughter was in a life raft or aboard the boat, or whether the boat was upside down.

    "Everything seemed to be under control," Laurence Sunderland said. "But then our call dropped and a hour later the Coast Guard called."

    Abby is hundreds of miles from land. The nearest ship was about 400 miles away. The rescue effort is being coordinated by the Reunion Islands and Australia. Sunderland had been sailing in 50- to 60-foot seas and it was dark when the EPIRB devices were activated.

    The Sunderlands are asking people to pray for their daughter, a high-school junior from Thousand Oaks, Calif.

    Charlie Nobles, executive director of the American Sailing Assn., said, "We're all praying for her and our thoughts are with her. If she's got the survival suit, and she's got the EPIRB and she's in pretty good shape, she's just got to try to hang on. And when they get there, these guys... they're going to hopefully send the best that they've got under those conditions to try to do a rescue and it's definitely possible. They're amazing people that do those rescues. They know exactly what they're heading into."

    Abby was for several months one of two 16-year-olds attempting to sail around the world alone. Australia's Jessica Watson completed her journey last month, just days before turning 17.

    Abby's brother Zac, who graduated from high school, completed a solo-circumnavigation last summer at 17.

    The timing of Abby's trip was criticized by some because it was placing her in the middle of the Indian Ocean when the stormy Southern Hemisphere winter was at hand.
    Diplomacy, it's a way of saying “nice doggie”, until you find a rock!

  • #2
    Brave kid, I hope she comes out on one healthy piece.
    "For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism."

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    • #3
      If not storms then pirates or slave traders.
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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      • #4
        I hope for the best, but these around the world records are moronic.

        The guinness book of records no longer recognises any of age categories for around the world for good reason.

        Every ****ing year or two some idiot ****s up by going to close to antarticia to save time for there BS.
        It cost a fortune to rescue these morons who there out of sheer stupidty

        They are not exploring they great unknown, they are not pushing the boundaries of human endeavour. They glory seeking fvkwits with million dollar boats, GPS navigation, and some convient multimillion dollar rescue team(our ****ing navy, who they don't pay)

        The fvktard Bullimore cost several million to rescue, he made several million selling his story... a story of incompeteance and stupidity. No cash and no recognition went to the people pulling his sorry ass out of the water.

        If you want impressive, follow some stories about the islanders around the Indian/pacific oceans and Timor seas traveling 1000kms in a wooden boats they made for themselves and stars to guide them

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        • #5
          A 16-year-old US girl sailing solo around the world is found safe and well in the Indian Ocean after earlier activating distress beacons.


          she's been found safe and well

          and yes I agree, somewhat idiotic.
          Juu nin to iro


          English doesn't borrow from other languages. It follows them down dark alleys, knocks them over, and goes through their pockets for loose grammar.

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          • #6
            @MM

            Why don't you say what you really mean?
            Brian (the devil incarnate)

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            • #7
              Good that she is found safe and well!

              I think MM means that such feats are not important in the history of the world: it is not that something is done that hadn't been done before. True to some point, but on the other hand, it is not because somebody has visited the pyramids that I don't want to see them... :-)
              pixar
              Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die tomorrow. (James Dean)

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              • #8
                The sea is a really, really challenging place. Its not that it is necessarially stupid to sail solo - it is stupid to go when conditions are not as safe as you can control- as it appears in this case.

                She not only put herself at risk, but potentially put her rescuers at risk too.

                Accidents do happen - http://www.rte.ie/news/2010/0612/newtownards.html. This guy died today at a local regatta - only a few miles from where I was race training. That is not the same as intentially putting yourself in danger.
                Dont just swallow the blue pill.

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                • #9
                  Her parents are f***ing nuts to let her sail the Southern Seas at this time of year - many a crew in much larger boats haven[t made those crossings, much less a 16 y/o girl alone in a rather small boat for the purpose.

                  Then there is word her father, anxious to set the record, hurried repairs on her boat so as to beat any potential rivals for the 'record'.

                  Personally, letting your minor daughter do this this borders on child endangerment. Newsman Geraldo Rivera, no matter what you think of him otherwise, is a very experienced sailor who has made this voyage several times in a sailboat twice the size and he too thinks they were negligent, at the least.

                  Take that from someone who has sailed Lakes Superior and Huron when the November Witch, aka the Witch of November, arrived a month early - enough to scare the crap back into you
                  Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 12 June 2010, 20:03.
                  Dr. Mordrid
                  ----------------------------
                  An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                  I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    There are regular around the world yacht races, one of the biggest shortcuts they use is between Africa and Australia, the event organisers always say avoid the dangerous antarctic waters due to saftey reasons... there is always are bunch that do it anyway.

                    Storm at sea = bad.

                    Storm at sea in the antarctic waters between off the cape horn and lower Australia = not a place for "sport sailing"

                    Every couple of years there is a rescue for someone who should not have been there... And there are plenty of legitmate cargo carries that get into trouble and do need those rescue resources.

                    I quite happy for them to do there races and take shortcuts as long as they sign a waiver saying they will be left for dead if they endanger any personel in their rescue(and they always do)

                    Mountain climbers accept their risks, these sailors should have the same options.

                    <end of pet hate rant/>

                    PS I agree with Dr Mordrid, I would be thinking about criminal endagerment charges for the parents
                    and we have our own "special sailing heroine" pumped up by the media and parents to do something stupid.
                    Last edited by Marshmallowman; 12 June 2010, 23:06.

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