Cynthia Woods Disaster

Captron

Member III
I don't know if any of you have been following the Cynthia Woods story or not but I think it's a fascinating tale.

The Cynthia Woods was a 2004 Cape Fear 38 raced by a sailing team at Texas A&M University. The boat capsized during an race from Galveston to Veracruz in the Gulf of Mexico when the keel fell off. Right ... fell off. One crew member died inside the cabin, 5 others spent 26 hours floating in the gulf with 4 lifejackets before they were rescued. Conditions were rough in the 6 to 8 foot seas and 20knots of wind category but the boat was racing under full main and partially furled genoa.

The crew reported that they never felt the boat hit anything. They noticed water on the cabin sole and attempted to plug water gushing in but the boat capsized within a minute or so of the crew's first awareness of a problem; Apparently a very sudden and catastrophic failure.

Roger Stone was the safety officer and the man that died. According to crew reports he pushed two crew members out of the cabin but never managed to get out himself. He is considered the hero of this story although there are other heroes too.

All of the facts aren't in yet but the hull has been recovered and the lead/bulb keel has also been recovered (probably an interesting story line in itself). It is likely that forensic engineering study will find the reason(s) for the keel failure. It is likely that prior groundings contributed to the failure but the main villain seems to be in the design/build area. The boat is a Marek design.

After reading all this on the Sailing Anarchy website, I am thankful that I sail an old Ericson. Thank-you Bruce King and Ericson Yachts for giving us a fast AND safe boat.

If you're interested in following the story, the following link will get you to the forum on SA that has the first pictures of the recovered boat and keel. http://forums.sailinganarchy.com/index.php?showtopic=73804
:esad:
 
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JMCronan

Member II
I went to school there. I was on the dingy team, which is a totally separate organization from the offshore team. However, I did race with the offshore team on occasion. I will say that while the people who run the offshore program are not the most proficient racers they do not cut corners with safety. In my experience every saftey precation, within reason, was always taken to ensure the saftey of the crews and the vessels. The best efforts will not mitigate every risk. Sad situation.
 
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