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- Newsgroups: rec.boats
- Path: sparky!uunet!walter!porthos!iscp.bellcore.com!mikes
- From: mikes@iscp.bellcore.com (Michael Savino)
- Subject: Mike Plant AP Wire Release
- Reply-To: mikes@iscp.bellcore.com
- Organization: Bell Communications Research
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 92 14:38:40 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.143840.11655@porthos.cc.bellcore.com>
- Sender: netnews@porthos.cc.bellcore.com (USENET System Software)
- Lines: 52
-
-
- This is just coming off the AP New Wire service!
-
- PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) _ Sailor Mike Plant's capsized boat was
- missing a crucial vessel stabilizer when it has been spotted at sea
- more than a month after he reported trouble on a solo transatlantic
- trip, the Coast Guard said.
- The 60-foot sloop, Coyote, was seen by the crew of a freighter
- at 7:40 a.m. Sunday about 480 miles southwest of Ireland. There was
- no sign of the missing sailor.
- Coast Guard Petty Officer David Silva said the freighter came
- within 50 yards of the boat, but couldn't get closer because of
- rough weather.
- Plant left New York City on Oct. 16 for what was to be a
- two-week journey to France to participate in an around-the-world
- race that started Sunday.
- Coast Guard Lt. Andrew Sorenson said two Coast Guard planes and
- a Navy aircraft were continuing the search today. The Coast Guard
- was asking officials in France, England, Portugal and the
- Netherlands, which are nearer the upended Coyote, to send vessels
- to inspect its interior, he said.
- The tanker Protank Orinoco reported the boat's hull looked
- intact but was missing the keel bulb, a torpedo-shaped part that
- helps keep the boat upright, said Petty Officer Charles Smith. He
- declined to speculate on how the part might have come off.
- The rigging and sails visible below the surface as the Coyote
- crested the 8-foot seas appeared undamaged, Orinoco officials said.
- The sailor's family said they were hopeful that Plant, who has
- sailed around the world alone three times, was still alive.
- Plant ``is very much a survivor,'' said his brother-in-law, Bob
- Simmons of Wayzata, Minn. ``He has been in a situation like this.
- It's not a wholly uncommon experience for these shorthanded ocean
- racers.''
- The Coast Guard's efforts to reach the capsized boat were
- hampered by poor weather. ``It's a matter of finding someone who is
- closest and who has the resources to go,'' Silva said.
- Three days after leaving New York, Plant, 42, of Jamestown,
- R.I., asked a passing freighter to relay that he had lost
- electrical power, preventing him from using his long-distance radio
- gear and automatic pilot.
- The last contact with Plant was believed to have been a beacon
- signal picked up Oct. 27 by the Canadian Coast Guard. It was too
- weak to determine a position.
- Canadian authorities did not immediately notify U.S. officials
- that an American was involved because Plant hadn't registered the
- beacon's identification code.
-
- Family and friends in Rhode Island later tracked the
- identification number through the store where he bought the device.
- Plant had planned on arriving in Les Sables d'Olonne, France, on
- Oct. 30
- AP-DS-11-23-92 0917EST
-