Yachting

(Wang) #1

ADVENTURE


46 http://www.yachtingmonthly.com MAY 2016

which was a blaze of lights, and tacked in
drizzle to the Azócar Islets before setting
a course for Punta Lengue de Vaca (Cow’s
Tongue Point) to pass the Pájaros Islets
to port and about 20 miles offshore from
La Serena and the port of Coquimbo.
The next day and just to the north of the
dangerous reefs of the Pájaros, the wind
suddenly swung from ahead to astern
and rapidly increased in strength, gusting
over 50 knots. A steep sea quickly formed
against the Humboldt and we ran under
a triple-reefed main for a few hours, but
by nightfall the wind had died and we
were motoring under clear skies into a
long, confused swell. At around 0300
and without warning the old Bukh engine
stopped. It was the fuel injection pump and
there was no spare.
Sand and Foam was now so close
to Punta Lengue de Vaca that, as the
Humboldt slowly spun the boat in circles,
I could hear the swell breaking on the
shore. Incredibly, my mobile phone had
a signal and I left a message for Paula,
the daughter-in-law of the president of
the Quintero Yacht Club, Juan Porzio,
explaining that with no wind, no engine

Michael was a navigating
officer with P&O before
pursuing an academic
career at Cambridge,
Newcastle and Yale
universities. He then made a living
writing and publishing, including a guide
to the Caribbean in 1991. Currently, he
is an International Yacht Training (IYT)
instructor and, when not sailing Sand
and Foam, he runs charters in Scotland.
http://www.sthildaseaadventures.co.uk

Michael Marshall


and the current setting me on the shore I
badly needed a tow. She soon phoned back
to explain that the Armada would only
rescue me if I abandoned the yacht.
I decided to wait for the wind. The
current and wind played with me: a puff
of wind would allow me to sail offshore
only to die and Sand and Foam would
be swept back. After hours of this I had
just decided to abandon the yacht when
suddenly the mobile rang. It was Paula,
and the local Armada was coming to the
rescue. Juan Porzio, Claudio’s friend, had
contacted a friend at a local private marina,
Puerto Velero, who had called out the local
Coquimbo Armada – a RIB was on the way.
What a relief to see them approach. They
were excellent seamen and it was not long
before Sand and Foam was alongside at
Puerto Velero marina.
I was given a ‘disposition’ to stay in
Puerto Velero, where I met a wonderful
couple, Peter and Loly, who looked after
the boat and me. Sand and Foam is now
ashore at the marina, lucky not to have
been lost at sea, awaiting a new engine, and
still with some distance to sail to that fabled
destination port of Valparaiso. W

After Michael returned home he was sent
photos of a storm battering Puerto Velero.
Sand and Foam was undamaged ashore

I was lucky to still have Sand and Foam, after
she was towed to a safe berth in Puerto Velero

Saved from calamity,
Sand and Foam
receives a tow

STORM PHOTOS: cOuRTeSy PueRTO valeRO MaRina

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