The girls watching the sun set while anchored in Santa Rosalia's tiny harbor, a couple weeks before the storm. "Frances!" "Yeah?" "Feet off the moon!" |
As
we waited anxiously for the hurricane to reach us, we heard reports on
the Sonrisa SSB net, reports of destruction and of missing boats and people in
Baja cities and towns that we’ve come to know and love. Then we heard about Mary,
a 70-something singlehander on a Pearson Triton 28 named Iver. People reported seeing her before the storm, but nobody knew
where she’d holed up and whether she was okay. Every morning people requested
news and information about Mary.
Then,
maybe two or three days after the storm, a boat reported VHF radio contact with
her. She was okay, in a desolate anchorage called Trinidad, between Santa Rosalia and Punta San
Francisquito . But Mary was stranded, her boat washed ashore,
wrecked and dismasted. The person who contacted Mary reported that she didn’t
want to leave her boat, it was her home. She still had hope that she could be
pulled off and asked the boat to get a request for help to a port captain down
south or to the Mexican Navy.
On
Monday the 22nd, after we were able to buy fuel and get water in
Bahia de Los Angeles, we headed south, with plans to stop and check in on Mary.
En route, we got word that Alex and Sue on Maitairoa
were also headed south, a day behind us. They planned to stop in Trinidad at
dawn and to offer to take Mary and her things to Santa Rosalia. Mary would have
to be willing to abandon her boat.
Late
in the afternoon on Tuesday the 23rd, Mary hailed us from shore on
channel 16, just after we’d spotted Iver
on the beach. She sounded very happy to see and hear from us. I told her we’d
be ashore shortly to introduce ourselves. I told her Maitairoa was on the way and of their plans to arrive the next morning. She was surprised and
relieved. She now regarded her boat a total loss and was eager to be rescued.
Ashore,
she greeted us warmly. She’d been alone on the beach with her cat, Banderas,
for seven nights and eight days. But she effused about the beauty of the place.
She said she had plenty of food and water and wasn’t scared, not even during
the height of the maelstrom. She pointed to the top of a nearby dune, “I hauled
nine gallons of water and some food up there, see it? It occurred to me on the
second day or so that if some more bad weather comes, it could take the boat
and then I’d have nothing.”
The
sun was setting and I invited her back to Del
Viento for dinner. “You could even sleep aboard if you’d be more
comfortable, you’re absolutely welcome.”
But
she politely declined. She was more comfortable aboard and she usually went to
sleep at dark. I realized she had no idea of the destruction and loss of boats
and life down south. I filled her in and she was aghast, she'd assumed
her boat was the only casualty of the storm. She asked me for a hug.
--MR
The girls scouting for Mary's boat on a windless passage en route. |
The girls and I motored ashore just as the sun was setting, Iver on the beach ahead. |
Windy talking to Mary the next morning. We removed all her things that day. The yellow box on the stern is her sewing machine. |
Very glad to hear Mary is okay. What condition is her keel in? I am hoping and praying her boat can be refloated and repaired.
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