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Eight divers rescued after all-night ordeal at sea
Charlotte Observer/Miami Herald ^ | 09/23/03 | CURTIS MORGAN

Posted on 09/23/2003 11:31:04 AM PDT by bedolido

After their boat overturns, friends swim for hours toward safety before being rescued.

Coming up the anchor rope after scuba diving with friends off Miami Sunday, Raymond Gill looked toward the surface and knew something was amiss.

Instead of the bright white bottom of their boat, a weird dark thing loomed overhead. At first, Gill thought they'd somehow found the wrong boat in the murky 70-foot depths, but as they swam up, the truth became all too clear.

''Oh [blank], that's the boat and it's upside down,'' Gill said Monday, only a few hours after he and seven friends had survived a wet, cold and scary all-night ordeal.

After their boat capsized near Fowey Rocks, they lashed together a makeshift raft from coolers and life vests and struggled to the safety of Stiltsville in north Biscayne Bay -- but only after tides and currents swept them from their first target of the Cape Florida lighthouse six miles away.

They spent some eight hours swimming in the dark, rough water, but it seemed endless.

''I can't even describe it. It was like hours and hours on end,'' said an exhausted Gill, 22.

A boater spotted them waving and yelling Monday morning on a Stiltsville porch. The rescue of the eight friends, ages 17 to 23 and mostly from West Kendall, brought a happy end to a night-long search by the U.S. Coast Guard and relief for worried family and friends.

''Oh my God, it was a nightmare,'' said Dottie Gill, Raymond's relieved mother. ``I haven't slept yet either. We prayed all night and talked to the other parents.''

According to Coast Guard spokesman Ryan Doss, the eight headed out early Sunday from Matheson Hammock for a dive trip. Aboard: Gill and friends, most from the Sunset High School area: Giovani Zamora, 22, whose father owned the boat; Yesenia Diaz, 22; Esteban Sosa and girlfriend Dianna Lotow, ages unknown; and Deidre Walsh, Brooke Benezra and Jessica Perez, all 17.

It wasn't a great day for boating, with winds to 20 knots, seas running an estimated five to seven feet and the National Weather Service posting small-craft advisories. But the 1989 23-foot Seacraft was a capable boat, and Gill said he and several in the crew were highly experienced, boating and diving in the areas since childhood. They anchored off Fowey, with six descending for a 40-minute dive.

When they came back up around 3:30 p.m., the boat had flipped. The two women left topside were drifting off, screaming and clinging to a cooler.

They all gathered next to the bobbing hull to assess the situation, Gill said. Their cellphones were gone. Their marine radio didn't work in the first place, according to the Coast Guard. Gill said Zamora dove under several times trying to locate the boat's signal flares but couldn't find them.

CUT OFF

With no way to call for help, Gill said they quickly gathered everything that would float -- coolers, life jackets, even inflating the buoyancy vests attached to the scuba tanks. Then, with the tide moving in, they cut the anchor, hoping to drift to shore with the floating hull or get close enough to flag down another boat.

But with darkness came cold. Then the boat seemed to stop moving, seemingly hooking something below.

Scared about surviving the night clinging to the slippery hull, Gill said they decided to swim for it -- aiming for the lighthouse silhouetted by the lights of downtown Miami at least six miles away.

TAKING TURNS

The strongest swimmers took turns pulling the others, Gill said. At one point, Gill spotted a channel marker to gauge progress. An hour later, they had barely made headway. The mood shifted with the current.

After some squabbling, they set out for Stiltsville -- closer but nearly invisible in the darkness.

They made it at around 5 a.m., broke a window, drank some bottled water stored inside and slept until dawn. They flagged a nearby boat around 9:30 a.m. and were reunited with joyful relatives by noon at the Coast Guard's Miami Beach station. Sunburn, jellyfish stings, dehydration and shaken nerves were the only injuries.

It remained uncertain why the boat, which was salvaged, had sunk.

The Coast Guard said the eight had been fortunate. For one, Doss said, they failed to file any float plan.

Parents didn't alert the Coast Guard until 11:24 p.m. and when they did, no one knew exactly where the boat had gone or even where they'd launched it.

They also left the boat, which is typically the easiest thing for rescuers to see.

Ismael Zamora, Giovani's father, said his son was right to swim for it.

''He definitely made the right decision,'' Ismael Zamora said. ``I think that was one of the reasons they're alive.''


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: allnight; divers; eight; rescued; sea

1 posted on 09/23/2003 11:31:05 AM PDT by bedolido
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To: bedolido

SAFE: After an all-night ordeal at sea, friends, age 17 to 23, whose boat capsized on Sunday, are safe with the U.S. Coast Guard. WFOR-CBS 4

2 posted on 09/23/2003 11:34:36 AM PDT by bedolido (I can forgive you for killing my sons, but I cannot forgive you for forcing me to kill your sons)
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To: bedolido
''He definitely made the right decision,'' Ismael Zamora said. ``I think that was one of the reasons they're alive.''

Okay, Ismael, you take that stand. I'll line up with the Coast Guard, which probably has just a wee bit more experience with these things. They were foolish leaving the boat, especially that soon, but everything turned out alright.

3 posted on 09/23/2003 11:37:48 AM PDT by Coop (God bless our troops!)
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To: Coop
I'm with you, I think. However, I am wondering why the boat capsized. True, it was rough, but that is a capable boat, as the article says.

The fact that the radio was not functional says something about the way the boat was maintained.
4 posted on 09/23/2003 11:46:29 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: Coop
Probably a real fluke...20knot winds...5-7' seas...the boat probably broached on a wave.the two girls were both on one side, and there were probably a bunch a spare tanks at the back of the boat..the "perfect wave"..caught it..and ove r it went....seems to me, and I'm far from an expert, that 8 people who had some boating experience would be able to right the boat...it ain't that hard..
5 posted on 09/23/2003 11:50:33 AM PDT by ken5050
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To: Coop
I agree...stay with the boat...even though upside down it was floating and anchored
and easier to spot from the air...and its easier to keep everybody together at the boat...
then swimming in the dark...
6 posted on 09/23/2003 11:51:12 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: Sam Cree
I'm with you, I think. However, I am wondering why the boat capsized. True, it was rough, but that is a capable boat, as the article says.

My first thought, too. If the boat was anchored, it seems to me it should have automatically lined itself up with the wind and waves. Sounds to me like they anchored in a place where the waves had no fixed direction or something.

Still, it seems strange that a wave should be able to catch an anchored boat that way.

I'm wondering if these kids didn't just make up a story to explain the capsized boat -- what if, instead, they were doing something really stupid like running sidelong to the waves?

7 posted on 09/23/2003 11:53:32 AM PDT by r9etb
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To: joesnuffy
Don't leave the boat unless it's sunk. They are very lucky to have survived.
8 posted on 09/23/2003 11:56:17 AM PDT by CJ Wolf
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To: r9etb
They may have anchored from the stern.
9 posted on 09/23/2003 11:57:25 AM PDT by CJ Wolf
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To: r9etb
Well, waves do pile up higher and steeper on the reef than they do further offshore. But 70 feet is getting past the breakers, I think.

Maybe they had it anchored with too little scope and a wave broke over the bow. I can see a capsize once a lot of water was on board and moving around.
10 posted on 09/23/2003 12:02:32 PM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: CJ Wolf; Sam Cree
They may have anchored from the stern.

I can see it if they're anchored both bow and stern, but anchored from stern alone should just line the stern up to the waves.

Sam's explanation makes some sense -- tossing, say, 100 feet of anchor line into 70 feet of water, in 7' waves would probably put a lot of water into the boat.

But I'm still having trouble seeing how that would translate into capsizing. Doesn't seem like a 23' boat is broad enough for water to capsize it that way.

11 posted on 09/23/2003 12:08:15 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: bedolido
"Gill said he and several in the crew were highly experienced, boating and diving in the areas since childhood."

Highly experienced?

These idiots have been trying to commit suicide since their childhood!

20 knot winds?

8 people in a 23 foot boat?

If each of them weighed 150 lbs, and had 70 lbs of dive gear each [x 6 divers] = 1320 lbs + 2 girls + food = 1600 lbs?

Maybe they were trying to escape to Cuba?

12 posted on 09/23/2003 1:04:43 PM PDT by G.Mason (Lessons of life need not be fatal)
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To: r9etb
The water, once in the boat, would move back and forth, from side to side, rapidly and unpredictably as the boat rolled, making it roll even further, and in turn perhaps allowing the weight of the water to apply even more force to the roll. At 8 lbs per gallon, water can be heavy. Only 50 gallons taken aboard means that 400 lbs. was moving back and forth in the boat.

I am still wondering, though, what really happened.

The beam is apparently 8'2" on that boat, which seems about right.

13 posted on 09/23/2003 1:08:27 PM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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To: bedolido
"a Stiltsville porch."

Those were some of the best parties ever...next to those we used to have on Soldiers Key and Ragged Key.
14 posted on 09/23/2003 1:12:59 PM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: Rebelbase
Stiltsville is nearly gone now. The Park is taking it over.
15 posted on 09/23/2003 1:28:45 PM PDT by Sam Cree (Democrats are herd animals)
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