Thursday, July 17, 2014

Ship Rescue – Just Jump Onto the Little Boat and Climb the Ladder

Casino boat Escapade, grounded off the coast of Tybee Island. (AP Photo/U.S. Coast Guard)

By Desmond Ford
After 16 hours stuck at sea, passengers stranded on a casino boat that ran aground off Georgia’s coast were ferried to shore Wednesday aboard two Coast Guard cutters.

U.S. Coast Guard ship Maria Bray brings passengers ashore. (AP Photo/Savannah Morning News, Brittney Lohmiller)
U.S. Coast Guard ship Maria Bray brings passengers ashore. (AP Photo/Savannah Morning News, Brittney Lohmiller)
Passengers and crew reached the dock shortly after 4 p.m. nearly a day after the boat left on it’s maiden voyage of its operator’s new Savannah service Tuesday night.
Four people were ferried ashore by helicopter.

Rescued passengers disembark. (AP Photo/The Morning News, Brittney Lohmiller)
Rescued passengers disembark. (AP Photo/The Morning News, Brittney Lohmiller)
The casino ship “The Escapade” is operated Florida-based Tradewinds Casino Cruise.
“There was a lack of sleep but they kept us entertained,” said Bernard Yount of nearby Springfield, Georgia. “I don’t really think anybody was scared. I didn’t see anybody panic. A few people were maybe worried about kids being home or animals being in the house.”
The crew were able to feed the passengers and the ship’s generator kept the lights on and the air conditioning going.
Passenger Michael Alcott of Savannah said “The AC was blowing cold. They had food,” said Alcott, 39. He said people slept on the floor using life jackets as pillows.
Both Alcott and passenger Dina Cook of Savannah said they felt the ship strike something at 9:30 p.m.
The Coast Guard said it was notified about midnight that the ship was stuck.
“It was nerve-wracking, the fact that we were not being told anything,” Cook said.
Initial attempts to tow the boat failed when the tow lines broke.
Those aboard were transferred first to small boats that hold about eight people, then to the two larger vessels, Petty Officer 1st Class Lauren Jorgensen said.

Tara Sinclair and Gwendolyn Miller greet Veronica Hayward. (AP Photo/The Morning News, Brittney Lohmiller)
Tara Sinclair and Gwendolyn Miller greet Veronica Hayward. (AP Photo/The Morning News, Brittney Lohmiller)
Tara Sinclair, waiting at the Savannah dock for her mother, 66-year-old passenger Veronica Heyward, said her mom told her passengers had to “jump from the big boat to the little boat and then climb a rope ladder” onto the cutter. “She called it a Fear Factor moment,” Sinclair said.
Jorgensen said the area where the boat was stranded was too shallow for the Coast Guard boats to pull alongside it.
The 174-foot-long Escapade was still stranded about 1.8 miles off the north end of Tybee Island, a popular beach destination east of Savannah, in the Calibogue Sound near Hilton Head, South Carolina, the Coast Guard said.
The Escapade is a casino ship operated by Florida-based Tradewinds Casino Cruise. The company’s Facebook page said that Tuesday night was to be the maiden voyage for its Savannah cruise service and passengers were invited to board for free.
The vessel is a three-story ship capable of carrying 500 passengers. It’s outfitted with slot machines, poker and blackjack tables and a roulette wheel.
Alcott said he felt the ship jolt when it ran aground about 9:30 Tuesday night. He said passengers continued to gamble for about three hours until they were told that they were stuck.
He and Cook both said the ship was listing at a sharp angle that forced people to walk leaning to one side, which Cook said left her with swollen ankles.
As she headed toward the buses that were shuttling passengers to their cars, Cook said she was ready for the experience to be over.
“I’m ready to go home and take a long, hot bath,” she said.

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