Posted on 08/02/2015 8:48:03 AM PDT by FlJoePa
JUPITER
From Juno Beach to Tequesta, boys like Austin Stephanos and Perry Cohen congregate wherever they can get a pole in the water.
They pepper the turquoise waves aboard boats. They talk incessantly about whats biting: snook, kingfish, wahoo.
These are pier rats, not mall rats known for lounging and canoodling on a sand bar accessible only by water and within the gaze of the iconic sunburnt Jupiter Lighthouse. They are obsessed about the newest fishing lures rather than video games, music or sports.
They are more fish than boy, said Marvin Steiding, a charter boat captain at the Jupiter Inlet Marina who knows the type well.
These boys grow up around the ocean. When they arent in school, they are on the water.
Steiding calls it good clean fun. Its a fairytale upbringing, a bit of sun-drenched innocence where boys forge fast friendships and families grow closer all around the hook, leader and pole.
This is where the glitz of the South Florida metropolis fades. You dont see many yachts at the marinas. Oh, theres money here to be sure. Children, like Stephanos, go to private schools and have their own boats.
But its more about the fish than the flash.
And so it is that for many teenagers, like it is for Perry and Austin, the mangrove-lined tributaries and ocean is their playground and their passion.
And now these young men appear lost to the sea.
The Coast Guard called off the exhausting search Friday at sunset though private boats will still scour the ocean.
In a story that captured the nation, the best friends motored their 19-foot single-engine fishing boat into a vicious storm over the Atlantic on the afternoon of July 24. The Coast Guard discovered the capsized boat on Sunday in the Gulf Stream just south of Daytona Beach.
Hope was that the boys known for their seamanship had fashioned a makeshift raft from an engine cover and a cooler buoyed hopes of their families who saturated the media. Former football star Joe Namath, a friend of the Stephanos family and a Tequesta resident, held a news conference and a $100,000 award was offered for their rescue. Country music star Alan Jackson, who has Jupiter ties, took to Twitter.
The mothers took to the airwaves, their tragedy the nightmare of every parent with a teenager. Their grief, their refusal to give up, played out in the spotlight from the Today Show to gossipy websites. Missing Florida teens: Full coverage
But after a Coast Guard searched waters vaster than the state of Maine, there was no sign of the teens and, before the weekend, reality had set in. They were gone. The families said the boys were supposed to stick to the Loxahatchee River because Cohen wasnt allowed on the ocean unsupervised. Friends, though, said the two had used the app popular with their age group, Snapchat, to brag that they were going to the Bahamas.
And the parents took heat for allowing the boys on the water by themselves, but Steiding said those are non-boaters talking. There is no law prohibiting kids from captaining their own boat. Its not like when we were kids. Every kid has their own boat, he said. They are used to trips to the Bahamas. Its like taking a car ride down to Palm Beach.
Paula Garcia, 18, who works at the U Tiki Beach, the restaurant that pumps endless reggae music out toward the marina, echoed the sentiment
Usually the only thing to do around here is to go the beach or go on the boat, you know, said the 18-year-0ld who knows the Stephanos family.
You know how everyone is saying that they shouldnt be on the boat when they are so young, but theyve been doing it forever, she said. Its just the thunderstorm came out of nowhere.
At Jupiter Christian School, where Stephanos attended, teachers said after at a prayer vigil that the child was simply obsessed about fishing. In art class, he drew nothing but boats and ocean life. Faith played a big role in Stephanos life and the vigil brought out more than 200 people who linked hands and prayed for the boys.
You can see for yourself that we are a very close-knit community and we needed each other tonight and we needed to pray, said Emily Walsh, an adult who attended the vigil.
And now with this tragedy for many of the boys peers, teetering on the threshold of adulthood, the emotions are overwhelming. At one prayer service, it was all braces and tears. The teens seemed connected in small groups at the hip, trying to make sense of it all.
Malia Bowman knew the towheaded Cohen as a classmate and he would brag to her about the fish he had caught. Perry would talk about it all the time, she said. Its just a really sad situation.
Out on the pier and the marina, the missing boys were the main topic of conversation. Many had fished with the boys at one time or another.
Tanner Stephanos, a cousin, was out on Juno Beach skim boarding on Tuesday. Striking a very Sean Spicoli-like vibe with long sun-bleached locks, the 17-year-old recalled how he played hide-and-seek with Austin when he was younger. Salt still coated his skin from a day in the ocean.
We are a very active people, Tanner Stephanos said. Austin has been around boats since he was in diapers. He was the first kid I ever fished with.
The family of Carly Black, Austins mom, owns Grand Slam Tackle in Jupiter. While Cohen was supposed to stay within the confines of the river, Stephanos was allowed on the ocean with his boat and was implicitly trusted by his parents.
His father Blu and I, we both grew up on the water and obviously when we met, of course, we were going to have children that loved being on the water, she said. Hes a water baby. Its in his blood.
Austin wasnt known for his school smarts but for his quick-thinking on the water. His mother called him a modern day MacGyver.
He researches and knows so much about the things he loves. He loves fishing. He loves being on the boat, she said.
He can be on Survivor and win the whole thing.
Head to the Jupiter Beach Park Pier and you can find Austins and Perrys all over. At the bait shack, three of their fellow young anglers take a break from catching snook, looking at their smart phones at lures they want to buy. Kevin Estevez, Skyler Sparks and Ricky Denti fill their Instagram accounts with pictures of fish they caught.
Meg Robinson, who works at the pier shop that sells T-shirts with slogans that say Fight Stress With Grouper Therapy. She calls the wharf rats her boys.
Theyre the regulars. They come out here every day, she said. Its a Florida way of life especially here in this area of Jupiter.
The threesome about to be sophomores in high school could have been forged in a Sunshine State version of the buddy movie Stand by Me. They find the mall scene too crowded and annoying but sometimes forget that not all of their peers are as passionate about their sport.
We start talking about fishing to them and they are like, What are you talking about, said Sparks, who knew Stephanos.
Estevez said Stephanos and Cohen no longer look like the kids in the photo, that they matured and are known for being strong young men.
But Estevez said he would never go out on the ocean alone without an adult, calling it sketchy in case an emergency comes up.
But teenagers are hard-wired to take risks.
Sparks added, I went offshore on my boat alone before, but it was scary. It was fun though. I did catch a kingfish on a dead sardine.
We don’t have salt water in my neck of the woods but we definitely have water up the wazoo and we live in and around it.
>>It is a way of life around here. Hard to understand for some people (including me at times), but it’s just the way it is, and has always been.
I grew up in the 70s in inland Florida (Gainesville), but my wife is from St Augustine and she never heard of 14 year olds going on a joyride to the Bahamas.
I’ve kept hoping that they’d be found alive, but truthfully that hope got pretty thin when they weren’t found with the overturned boat off Jacksonville.
Well, I think they were going fishing, not “joy riding”...also Jupiter is a lot closer to the Bahamas and Bimini than St. Augustine is.
I grew up there. Graduated from Jupiter High in the early 90’s. We weren’t allowed in the ocean. Jupiter Inlet is narrow and can get pretty rough even when it’s not stormy out. We stayed in the river/intracoastal.
When I was a kid I was on the boat with my dad & uncle fishing snook in the inlet and the engine died. Plenty of other boats around to give us a tow in, but I remember the comments from the men about how glad they were we weren’t out in the ocean.
I grew up there, know the “culture”, lived it myself. Boys that age don’t belong on the ocean by themselves. Sad outcome.
I used to let my 14yo loose on the Chesterpeake Bay with our Whaler, but I stopped doing that when I realized that he could hit 50mph with only his 90 lb frame in the boat.
Hey editor: Jeff Spicoli was the character played by Sean Penn in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
Sad story though....I feel for the families of these young men.
It abt 60 mile run to the Bahamas, IIRC. Guys I know did it w/ 25 footers with two or three making the run together and they got beat up pretty good when it wasn’t pure glass. I’m not sure these two were making the run as much as got caught out too far in bad weather.
The missing item here is judgement in which 14 year old "salt lifers" are not associated with. No mention of floatation vests or the other safety measures that could have saved their lives.
>>Well, I think they were going fishing, not joy riding...also Jupiter is a lot closer to the Bahamas and Bimini than St. Augustine is.
It is closer, but fishing is still joyriding if you don’t need the fish to feed your family. I think the family got lulled into a false sense of security, as evidenced by the multiple “they were half-boy, half-fish” statements. The sea is a cruel place and you learn to respect it through experience. 14 year olds are not half-fish and lack the maturity to deal with the ocean in all circumstances. The same is true for most 40 year olds.
We live in a coastal town and spend our entire summer on the water. My husband grew up on the Long Island Sound and is an experienced boater. Yesterday, we headed out of our marina and no sooner had we passed the jetty than big black clouds heeded our way. We turned around and headed back in. Well, within minutes we had a vicious thunderstorm when none was forecast. Many of our boating friends were caught in it and had anchors not hold and some pretty scary minutes. You always have to be prepared. We’ve seen the ocean turn from serene to wild in a matter of minutes.
That being said ,my heart breaks for these families. I have a 14 year old grandson who also thinks he invincible.
There was one vest remaining with the overturned boat. It’s reasonable to assume that there was more than one on it. Teenage boys made a tragic error of judgement. They did not have their parent’s permission to leave the inlet. Barring something miraculous, it appears that those boys are gone. Prayers for the families.
Yeah, I think it’s agreed they shouldn’t have been out there - especially that day. I don’t believe they were heading to the Bahamas though. I think they were just out fishing, and as a previous (and knowledgeable poster) surmised - just got caught out too far.
And there were pfd’s and other floatables (including a seat cushion) on the boat that haven’t been recovered. I’m a bit surprised that a 3’ Yeti cooler can’t be found with all this searching.
Sounds like a great lifestyle.
So tragic.
Maybe buying and using personal epirbs ought to become part of the salt life
A couple hundred dollars worth of gear might have saved those boys
Sometimes because we were foolish and sometimes because of the Flying Fickle Finger of Fate.
Life was not meant to be lived in a bubble.
Winning post... Wife and I have sailed for a number of years including inshore waters and rivers and we always have personal EPIRBS on our PFDs. I think if these poor kids had even one between them this may have turned out better. God rest their souls.
Ditto. The bottom of the ocean is littered with the bones of Master Sailors.
I am from Florida and spent my life fishing and especially for many years in my young adulthood in Miami. We were out in the Keys every weekend in a fishing boat.
You have to watch out for those afternoon squalls like a hawk. When you see one you crank up and get away fast. That’s what adults do. Kids will wait too long and take chances which is why they have no business far off shore without an adult.
Its very tragic to see kids die somewhere they should not have been allowed to be without supervision.
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