Chilean Navy Finds Solo US Sailor In South Pacific
By Eva Vergara and Michael Warren
Topics: From the Wires, News
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — A day after activating his emergency beacon, an 84-year-old American making his seventh attempt to sail alone around the tip of South America was found by the Chilean navy.
Thomas Louis Corogin was found tired but alive Wednesday on his 32-foot sailboat more than 520 miles south of Easter Island. The boat’s mast had broken far from land in the South Pacific.
A lawyer who runs a small marina in Port Clinton, Ohio, Corogin set sail from Easter Island on Dec. 27. He activated his emergency beacon on Tuesday morning, prompting the navy to send out an Orion search and rescue plane, which searched a vast expanse of ocean.
The plane had to return to Easter Island and refuel before going out again and spotting the tiny boat, Captain Jorge Bastias, the navy’s top spokesman, told The Associated Press.
It was stranded in relatively stable weather, but with ocean swells of about 15 feet.
The Navy then arranged for a Japanese merchant ship, the “White Kingdom,” to rescue the sailor. The ship was about 250 nautical miles away when it joined the search and was expected to reach him Wednesday night, local time, Bastias said. A frigate with a helicopter and medical team will then pick him up and take him to the mainland in Valparaiso, probably on Saturday, the navy said.
The broken mast wasn’t Corogin’s only mishap during this adventure — he had sent an email saying he was briefly hospitalized in Ecuador with a cut to his leg, said a friend and fellow sailor, Jack Majszak.
“Tom is the most unique person I’ve ever met,” said Majszak, who invited Corogin to lecture to his Modern Sailing School and Club in Sausalito, Calif., last year after meeting with him in the Panama Canal.
Majszak described Corogin as an experienced sailor and storyteller — he even wrote a spy novel, “Agape” — who felt comfortable on his Westsail32, a boat known for its stability more than its speed.
“He should be fine, it’s a very stable boat,” Majszak said. “The 15-foot swells shouldn’t be too bad as long as they don’t come too quickly. If he battens up the hatches and goes down below the boat will bob like a cork and he should be fine. As long as he’s not seriously hurt, that’s the key.”
___
Michael Warren contributed to this story from Buenos Aires, Argentina. He can be reached at www.twitter.com/mwarrenap
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