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  • 13
    Oct
    2012
    4:35am, EDT

    Bachelor party rescued after wine cruise hits rocks

    View more videos at: http://nbcbayarea.com.

    By NBC News staff

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    SAN FRANCISCO -- A bachelor party had to be rescued after a wine-tasting cruise boat hit rocks near Alcatraz Island and began taking on water late Friday, NBCBayArea.com reported.

    The Neptune, which was carrying 22 people, hit what is known as “Little Alcatraz” and began taking on water.

    “We were on the boat and then next thing you know, we hit a rock and there was a big jolt,” Matthew Rice, the groom-to-be, said.

    “All of a sudden the Coast Guard boats came and we kind of just like got off,” he added.

    All those on board were rescued safely.

    Rachel Smith, another passenger, said the boat was “off course … and hit what we call Little Alcatraz.”

    Read more from NBCBayArea.com

    The boat’s captain said he was glad that no one was hurt in the incident.

    The Coast Guard is investigating what happened.

    The website for San Francisco Bay Boat Cruises says the Neptune is a “1958 classic motor vessel,” certified to carry 42 passengers.

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    84 comments

    Groom says: “All of a sudden the Coast Guard boats came and we kind of just like got off”... This guy's response is so wrong in so many different ways.

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    Explore related topics: boat, rescue, alcatraz, coast-guard, san-francisco, featured, bachelor-party
  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    1:37pm, EDT

    Two men reunite with wayward boat Queen Bee that washed up in Spain

    The "Queen Bee" boat that was lost in the Atlantic Ocean nearly four years ago returns to North Carolina after washing ashore in Spain. WITN's Dan Yesenosky reports.

    By Becky Bratu, NBC News

    Four years after a strong wave tossed them off their yellow fishing boat, Queen Bee, off the coast of Nantucket, Mass., Scott Douglas and his brother in law, Rich St. Pierre, climbed aboard again -- in a North Carolina parking lot.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In January, the U.S. Coast Guard called Douglas to tell him that the vessel, a 26-foot center console fishing boat made by Regulator, had washed up on the Spanish coast. It was rusty and covered in barnacles, but intact. Almost six months later, the North Carolina boatmaker retrieved the Queen Bee and brought it back to Edenton, where Douglas and St. Pierre were finally reunited with it Tuesday.

    3 years after US accident, boat washes up in Spain

    "It’s difficult to put yourself back … in that frame of mind, but getting on the boat was definitely emotional,” Douglas, 59, of Connecticut, told NBC News. “I was on the boat, it was a near-death experience. You don’t get to relive those things too often and, in many ways actually, you don’t want to relive them.”

    Jeremy Groves

    Scott Douglas (right) and Rich St. Pierre reunite with the Queen Bee in Edenton, N.C., on Aug. 28, 2012.

    It was an overcast and windy August 2008 day, and the two men were out fishing. St. Pierre, 69, was at the helm, and the water was restless. Waves crashed into the boat, rocking it, and a rogue one knocked the two men into the water.

    Douglas remembers thinking the water was not too cold. "The only way I was going to survive was just to get started, not tread water," he told NBC News in January. 

    The men made their way to shore, swimming more than one mile, and catching one last glimpse of the Queen Bee. It looked "pretty happy," rocking side to side, sailing away from its owner, Douglas said.

    “I think she tried to do what she could do and then she decided to go on a trip,” he added. "We wish this boat could tell the story.”

    Lt. Joe Klinker, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman, told NBC News in January that the most likely scenario is that the boat somehow got out into the Gulf Stream.

    The boat of a man who was tossed off his vessel in the waters off Nantucket more than three years ago has washed up in Spain. WNBC-TV's Katy Tur reports.

    "From there it may drift north off the coast of northern Canada and then east with the North Atlantic currents," Klinker told NBC News.

    Based on salvage law, the boat belonged to Spain, but it didn't want it. The Spanish government released it to the insurance company, which released it to Douglas, who, in turn, relinquished it to Regulator. Co-owner and President Joan Maxwell told NBC News she couldn't believe how good the boat's condition was.

    Courtesy of Regulator

    How the Queen Bee used to look: A 26-foot yellow center console fishing boat made by Regulator.

    "Unbelievable to think that a boat could survive in the Atlantic for three and a half years," she said.

    "We have no clue what this boat encountered in the time frame that it was gone."

     

    The seats still had their cushions, and the company was able to trade in the boat's batteries, Maxwell said. A nickel was found in the glove compartment. The port side looked as though it might have been hit, but with a new engine, the Queen Bee could sail again, Maxwell said.

    U.S. Coast Guard

    A boat that was lost at sea off the coast of Massachusetts in 2008 washed up on the coast of Spain more than three years later.

    Regulator, which employs about 70 people and has been in business since 1988, plans to show off the boat at exhibits and shows this fall.

    St. Pierre, who now lives in Nantucket and says he is nowhere near as comfortable on the water as he used to be, told NBC News he has written a draft of a children's book chronicling the imagined adventures of the Queen Bee.

    "The story about the boat has captured everybody’s imagination. You can imagine just what must have happened to it in those three and a half years," he said.

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    24 comments

    This is excellent publicity for "Regulator". If they are smart they will capitalize on this one boats' voyage and tie it into the quality of their boats. I'd buy one!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, north-carolina, regulator, queen-bee, edenton, scott-douglas, rich-st-pierre
  • 6
    Jul
    2012
    9:05am, EDT

    Was Long Island boat overcrowded before it capsized, killing 3 kids?

    Investigators on New York's Long Island say they are look at the possibility of whether overcrowding and not enough life vests played a role in the drowning deaths of three children after the boat they were on capsized. NBC's Craig Melvin reports.

    By The Associated Press

    Investigators are trying to learn more about the crucial seconds before a yacht capsized off Long Island, killing three children and leaving 24 others scrambling for their lives.

    The July Fourth accident has left more questions than answers in the search for a definitive cause. Investigators are counting on gaining knowledge from survivors and the boat itself once it is brought up from 60 feet below the surface of Long Island Sound.

    Efforts to raise the boat might begin as early as Friday.

    Authorities said several possibilities might have combined to doom the vessel known as Candi 1 as it was being positioned so passengers could watch fireworks.

    Nassau County Detective Lt. John Azzata said the cause remained under investigation but possibilities include the weather, overcrowding and a wake from another vessel. He said the area was busy with boaters watching the fireworks.

    The boat's skipper, Sal Aureliano, has told TV's News12 Long Island that he saw two lightning bolts and then a wave suddenly hit the 34-foot boat off Oyster Bay, on the north shore of Long Island.

    "It turned the boat around," he said, his voice cracking. "It just turned the boat. I didn't see it. It was dark. I didn't see it."

    "The next thing I know, we're turning, and we just kept turning, and everybody was in the water. It was chaos," said Aureliano, who didn't answer the door to The Associated Press.

    Authorities said the children who died got trapped in the cabin.

    Killed were Aureliano's nephew David Aureliano, 12, and two girls, 11-year-old Harley Treanor and 8-year-old Victoria Gaines. No serious injuries were reported by the 24 other adult-and-children passengers who were rescued from the water, mostly by fellow boaters.

    The Silverton yacht was built in 1984 but purchased recently. The yacht company filed for bankruptcy in April, and no one was available to say what the maximum number aboard should be.

    The boat's owner is Kevin Treanor, said attorney James Mercante, who was hired by an insurance company to represent him. Mercante said he had not spoken with Treanor but emphasized Treanor wasn't the yacht's operator when the accident occurred.

    Three kids dead after yacht capsizes off Long Island

    Telephone calls to Treanor's home and work telephones went unanswered Thursday night.

    Police and the Coast Guard would not say how many of those aboard were adults and how many were children. Safety experts said most boats have a manufacturer's plate that lists capacity by number of adults and by total weight. So theoretically, a boat could safely handle more passengers if some were children.

    Richard Drew / AP

    Two police boats are stationed near the opening to Long Island Sound in Lloyd Harbor, N.Y., as investigators try to learn more about the crucial seconds before a yacht capsized off Long Island.

    Phil Cusumano, a Boston-based safety instructor and yacht captain with 35 years of experience, said there is no question the boat was badly overloaded. He said he would limit a vessel of that size to six adults. Other boating sites suggested a maximum of 15 passengers.

    "Twenty-seven is just crazy," Cusumano said. "I wouldn't dream of doing that. I wouldn't do it at the dock, much less take it out on the water. It would tip over with the first turn."

    Each Fourth of July, vessels crowd the Long Island Sound shoreline to watch public and private fireworks displays. When the shows end, the exodus can be the nautical equivalent of a highway traffic jam.

    Scott Menzies, who said he positioned his 20-foot motor boat in the area to take in the celebration but did not see the accident, estimated there were at least 1,000 vessels on the water.

    "It was pretty crazy," he said.

    However, conditions on the water were calm during the fireworks and afterward, Menzies said.

    Though there was some rain around 10 p.m., conditions were in "no way bad enough" to capsize a large boat on their own, said David Waldo, an expert boater who was also on the water Wednesday night.

    Waldo, executive director of the WaterFront Center, a nonprofit sailing school in Oyster Bay, called the number of people aboard the yacht "alarming." School sailboats around the same length have a capacity of seven, he said.

    "It's just asking for a situation where things can go wrong and compound on themselves," he said.

    Another boater told Newsday he saw the yacht turn and then tip over after it was hit by a wake.

    "It was like in slow motion," said Sammy Balasso, of Oyster Bay. "All of a sudden, a lot of bodies were in the water."

    Balasso said he put the spotlight of his 38-foot speedboat on the capsized vessel and threw all the life jackets he had into the water. He said he rescued 20 people.

    "Everybody was panicking," Balasso said. "People were saying things like 'Why?'"

    Azzata said the boat should have had a life jacket for each person on board, but it was unclear if it did. Under state law, children under 12 are not required to wear life vests if they are in the main cabin, where the three victims were.

    Mike Treanor, who was related to some of the victims, answered the door at his suburban home in nearby Huntington.

    "It's a family tragedy," he said.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    117 comments

    27 people on a 34-foot boat! What were they thinking?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, capsized, long-island
  • 5
    Jul
    2012
    5:56am, EDT

    Three kids dead after yacht capsizes off Long Island, New York

    Police say a massive wave may have knocked 27 people from a yacht during an Independence Day celebration near New York's Long Island, leading to the drownings of three children. WNBC's Jonathan Vigliotti reports.

    By NBCNewYork.com

    Three children died and 24 other people were rescued after being pulled from the Long Island Sound after their yacht capsized on the Fourth of July, Nassau County police say.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Authorities say the group had been out watching fireworks on Oyster Bay to celebrate Independence Day when tragedy struck. The cause of the capsize is under investigation, though officials believe weather, overcrowding or a massive wave from the wake of another boat may have been factors.


    Nassau County Deputy Inspector Kenneth Lack said two of the child victims were recovered from inside the sunken yacht after a long overnight search. Another was pulled from the water Wednesday night. The victims were David Aurelino, 12, Harley Treanor, 11, and Victoria Gaines, 8.

    Authorities said the boat party was a group of family members and friends who were returning from a fireworks display when their vessel capsized and began sinking. Two people were operating the boat, and investigators say there is no evidence they were intoxicated when the accident happened.

    Someone called 911 just after 10 p.m. Wednesday to report the accident, and nearby civilian watercraft helped officials in the rescue effort.

    For more, visit NBCNewYork.com

    The U.S. Coast Guard says survivors were pulled from the water after the 34-foot Silverton capsized. All 27 passengers had been in the water at one point, police said. Most of them were taken aboard other crafts very quickly, he said. 

    Police say the rescue operation was hampered by the number of victims in the water, the time of day and the number of boats out celebrating the holiday.

    Lack says some but not all passengers had been wearing life jackets. Authorities said part of their investigation would delve into whether there were enough life jackets on the yacht for all the passengers, which is required. It's also required that anyone younger than age 12 have a life jacket on when outside the boat's cabin.

    A special marine warning was in effect for that particular area of the Long Island Sound late Wednesday night. Radar captured between 10:30 p.m. and 11 p.m. showed a severe thunderstorm crossing Oyster Bay with winds of up to 40 mph.

    Coast Guard Petty Officer Anthony Kozak said the Silverton yacht was submerged about 60 feet under water three miles off the coast of Oyster Bay.

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    153 comments

    This was a tragedy to be sure, but as a former boater with over 40 years experience I can offer the opinion that both the operator of the Silverton and most of the other operators around him were unqualified to be at the helm. A part of the reason I finally got out of boating was the proliferation o …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, rescue, capsized, coast-guard, long-island-sound, yacht, featured, oyster-bay
  • 6
    Mar
    2012
    9:37am, EST

    Nearly 100-year-old ship on lawn riles wealthy area

    By Phoebe Unterman, NBCLosAngeles.com

    NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. -- Dennis Holland still has the 1929 Ford Model A he drove to high school half a century ago.

    He houses his tool collection in a barn built that same year on a buffalo ranch in Irvine. He took it apart, brought it to his home in Newport Beach, and reassembled it in his yard.  

    “I just like old things,” Holland, 66, said.

    For more, visit NBCLosAngeles.com

    One such “thing” is the Shawnee. The 72-foot, ketch-style wooden ship, wedged between the barn and Holland's ranch-style home, is the latest in a lifetime’s worth of restoration projects.

    But the ship’s presence has alienated some of his neighbors, who say -- privately and not for attribution -- that a lumbering boat has no place in the neighorbood. The median home price in Newport Beach is more than $1 million.  

    The neighbors took their concerns to the city, and now Holland is facing a court order requiring him to remove the ship by the end of April or face fines of up to $1,000 a day or jail time, said Newport Beach Deputy City Attorney Kyle Rowen.

    “We hope Mr. Holland will comply with the court’s orders and move the boat to a suitable location,” Rowen said.

    To Holland though, the boat’s massive frame isn’t an eyesore — it evokes memories from an almost 60-year relationship with the boat.

    It starts with a vivid image of the Shawnee docked in Tahiti in 1924.

    Holland saw it in a magazine when he was 8 years old, and shortly after, his father took him to see the ship in San Francisco.

    Holland was immediately taken with its shape and finely crafted details — the subtle curve of the interior staircase, the amber tone of the African mahogany, the intricate teak woodwork.

    He followed the Shawnee from afar for decades. About 10 years ago, the family that owned the ship fell on hard times and was no longer able to afford to maintain it.  

    One day when he was sailing near Newport Beach, Holland spotted the boat looking abandoned and sagging low in the water.

    Holland contacted the family and, when he learned of their predicament, immediately began plotting to save the Shawnee.

    “I had to keep her afloat," Holland said. But there were two conditions.  

    Before accepting the project, Holland won the city’s approval to restore the boat in the yard outside his home on a residential street in Newport Beach.

    Keeping the boat at home saved him the nearly $30,000 a year it would have cost to store the ship off his property.

    He also decided to check his health, a decision that may have saved his life, Holland said.

    The first doctor he visited diagnosed him with advanced prostate cancer and gave him 18 months to live.

    But the second gave him a 90 percent chance of seeing 10 more years — just the amount of time he estimated it would take to restore the Shawnee.

    Holland moved the boat into his yard in 2006. As of four months ago, Holland is experimenting with a new treatment and is doing well.

    But now it’s the Shawnee whose future seems imperiled.

    “Shawnee’s got the same kind of disease I have,” Holland said. “Now I’ve got to take care of her.”

    Holland’s ship violates an ordinance passed in 2009 requiring homeowners to obtain permits for projects such as his and give officials an estimated completion date.

    Holland says he can’t offer an exact date because of the restoration project’s complexity, and the city won’t accept his completion prediction of three to four years, Holland said.

    But Holland asserts the ship, approaching its hundredth birthday, is impossible to move in its current state — he has yet to piece everything back together.

    The city is unsure of the boat’s fate if Holland fails to remove it, but Holland knows he can’t destroy the boat himself.

    “If they come to destroy it, I’ll have to leave town,” Holland said. “I can’t watch that happen.”

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    277 comments

    Good for you Holland, keep your boat right where it is. If the rich are that bothered they can sell and buy a million dollar home elsewhere.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, california, newport-beach, lawn
  • 23
    Nov
    2011
    7:29pm, EST

    Man calls 911 when stolen boat runs out of gas

    By msnbc.com staff

    Coast Guard officials in Florida say they helped one seafood company with their big catch of the day -- a 33-year-old man who took the establishment's crab boat out for a ride.

    About 8 a.m., William Hodges was cruising the Gulf of Mexico in the 17-foot boat when the watercraft ran out of gas and he called 911 for help, Coast Guard Petty Officer Michael De Nyse told the Tampa Tribune.

    About the same time Hodges was calling for assistance, the I.C. Sharks seafood company of St. Petersburg called authorities to report a stolen 17-foot crab boat.

    "The gentleman on the boat called in for gas, saying he was disabled and adrift about a mile east of Weedon Island," De Nyse told the Tampa newspaper. "Coincidentally, another party was calling claiming it was stolen at almost the same time."

    The Coast Guard arrived on the scene shortly after, as did deputies, De Nyse said.

    Hodges was arrested and charged with grand theft.

     

    13 comments

    Candidate for the Darwin Award.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: boat, florida, coast-guard, tampa, seafood, boat-th, boat-theft

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