Tuesday: November 17, 1998

 

No significant new Information that I have found.  I have added two pages for thsoe interested in Data. The NY Times map is on this page.

 

 

Large map of Honduras

Table of Mitch Positions

 

Monday: November 16, 1998:

Hello Fellow 'Jammers
Three weeks ago was the last contact with our friends.Below is my Saturday Fantome Update, with  an article from the New York Times, from the Saturday Edition.

If occasionally you get a "TOO MANY USERS" message, please be patient, and check the next day. This site was never really designed to have the traffic it has received in the last few weeks.

There has been a lot of discussion on-line among 'Jammers, which has helped. You can hook up with other 'Jammers on-line below.
_____________________________________________
ICQ   Look for ICQ # 16432408 or 17630038  These chat rooms  are available
for many hours daily.

Yahoo:  chat.yahoo.com  Go to the Stock Talk Section: User Rooms :
Windjammer   Sundays 10pm EST

http://forums.delphi.com/m/main.asp?sigdir=wjfanclub   I haven't been there,
but it comes recommended.
__________________________________________________
TRUST FUND:  A trust Fund has been set up for the families.

S/V Fantome S.A. Trust
c/o PO BOX 190120
Miami Beach, FL
33119-0120

______________________________________________
Listed here are several Memory pages put together by other 'Jammers.

http://www.akaresults.com/fantome

http://24.1.98.114/willison_web_server/fantome

http://www.fortogden.com/wjfantomemem.html
____________________________________________________

I am still hopeful we will learn the fate of our friends.

Take Care and Have Faith

Dean in Southern Delaware


Saturday, November 14. 11 pm EST

Hello Fellow 'Jammers

There is no news again. However, there is an good article from the New York
Times, included  below. I do have a few quibbles with it referring to
Fantome 10 years ago, but at least this one balances the reporting with
quotes from some marine experts. One can see, by comparing this to some of
the other articles, why the Times has a stellar reputation. I have also
included the map they sent, as an attachment. If it doesn't work on your
system,  let me know. I may add it to a web site. The map is incomplete in
that it doesn't show times, making it misleading.  I may try and do
something about that at a later time, if there is interest.  Being one who
loves maps, charts and weather, I may lay this all out for you. We all know
generally what is thought to have happened. Maybe a visual aide will help
out understanding for some not as familiar with the area.

I have also included a CNN transcript.

As I said yesterday, I was going to collect some e-mail addresses for the
press. I plan on letting them know how wrong I feel the statements made by
the lawyer are, and to give them a true understanding of my view of
Windjammer. I will not abuse or harangue the reporters. I will simply offer
the some of my memories of the real facts the extended WJ Family. Below are
a few of the address that I (with a LOT of help from shipmates) found. Some
of these are web sites, which usually have a "CONTACT US" link of some kind.
I also found a couple of real e-mail addresses.
_______________________________________
Reuters Editorial Contacts
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Primary Contact
email: editor.reuters@reuters.com
Miami General miami.newsroom@reuters.com

Sun-Sentinel (Ft. Lauderdale): Executive News Editor Kurt Franck:
kfranck@tribune.com
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/
DANA CALVO and DEBORAH RAMIREZ (reporters)
( possible addresses dcalvo@sun-sentinel.com and dramirez@sun-sentinel.com

St. Petersburg Times:
www.national@sptimes.com
National News:
national@sptimes.com
Business News:
biznews@sptimes.com
Letters to the Editor:
letters@sptimes.com

New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/

Miami Herald  www.herald.com
DEPARTMENT E-MAIL PHONE
Business News business@herald.com (305) 376-3600
Foreign News worldnews@herald.com (305) 376-3566
National News nationalnews@herald.com (305) 376-3560
(Letters to the Editor) HeraldEd@herald.com FAX (305) 376-8950
ccorozo@herald.com

__________________________________________________________
Some WindJammers are jumping in to aid the Red Cross Relief efforts, or
private efforts.  There is one private effort in New Jersey, which is taking
donated items and cash to be sent to Puerto Cortes. There are many other local efforts
around the country and in Canada. Write me, and I can forward any
information on that..

Thank you for the many people who send me e-mail each day, and spot and
forward things to me. It helps a great deal. I also appreciate your notes of
"Thanks. Just proves that WJ'ers are the best people.

Not sure what more to say this evening, there is a lot here.. Just hoping
that tomorrow brings us some word on the fate of our friends.

I will write again as events warrant.

Take Care and Have Faith...

Dean in Southern Delaware

Dean Dey
http://www.rec.udel.edu    Work Web
http://www.rec.udel.edu/wj.htm     Windjammer Page

_____________________________________________________
New Your Times Story

http://www.nytimes.com/yr/mo/day/news/national/windjammer-lawsuit.html

Ship Into Eye of Storm Leaves Grief and Suits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
By JIM CARRIER

KEY WEST, Fla. -- All that remains of the cruise ship are two life rafts,                  
seven life jackets, part of a wooden staircase, photographs of the crew
members that their mothers clutch at a vigil and, eerily, images of the ship
in full sail posted on the Internet as memorials by her former passengers.

Fantome, the ship herself, once regal and filled with rum-spiced laughter
and steel-drum songs as she plied the Caribbean, lies on the bottom of the
sea off the coast of Honduras. The 30 West Indian crew members, along with
their 32-year-old

British-born captain, disappeared with her in the fury of Hurricane Mitch,
one of the worst tropical storms in history.

Now, in lawsuits filed this week in Miami, families of crew members say
their loved ones died because the ship's owner, Windjammer Barefoot Cruises
of Miami, sent the sailors out to sea on a suicide mission to save the
vessel.

Company officials, who continue to search for crew members or clues to the
sinking, say they were following standard marine practice, sailing south of
a Caribbean storm to avoid to being battered in port. But the storm changed
course, they said, and enveloped the ship as she was on the verge of safety.

The Fantome debate is raging along the Eastern Seaboard, as sailors try to
imagine being at the helm of a ship as long as a football field in a storm
with 180-mile-per-hour winds that devastated four countries and killed more
than 11,000 people.

But while tall-ship captains and experts on hurricanes and sea safety
question the decision of the company and the captain, they agree that no
matter how good the ship and crew, sometimes storms win.

In the case of Fantome, they say, it is almost as if the hurricane hunted
her down.

The regular six-day cruise from Omoa, Honduras, to Belize and back was
normally a milk run for Fantome. Passengers were promised visits to rain
forests and Belize's coral reef from the 282-foot steel-hulled four-mast
schooner Fantome, built in 1927 for the Duke of Westminster. She had been
owned by Guinness Brewing and Aristotle Onassis.

Windjammer officials found the ship rusting in Kiel, Germany, in 1969 and
after rebuilding her at a cost of $6 million, made her the flagship for a
small fleet carrying vacationers on cruises in which formal wear was a clean
T-shirt. The price of Fantome's cabins ranged from $875 to $1,075 a week.

The normal crew of 45 men and women were from Guyana, Grenada and other East
Caribbean countries. Their salaries of $300 to $700 a month made them
affluent in their villages. Under Capt. Guyan March, a boyish Cornwall
native, the ship had a fun-loving crew, former passengers say.

But on the night of Oct. 25, a Sunday, as 97 passengers were ferried out to
Fantome in Omoa for what they thought would be the start of their cruise,
rain was coming down in sheets. Though queasy, Karen Rutledge of West
Chester, Pa., remembers the sight of the ship. "It was beautiful," Ms.
Rutledge said, "lit up in the rain. Looking back, it is a haunting vision."

The crew had drinks and dinner on the table. Captain March told the
passengers that Hurricane Mitch, which had formed in the Caribbean the
previous Thursday, was moving northwest. Fantome would go east, he said, to
play in Honduras Bay Islands.

But by the time the ship set out at midnight, Captain March and his boss,
Michael D. Burke, the president of Windjammer, who was at the company's
headquarters in Miami, had decided to cancel the cruise. Burke, 42, said
Friday that it had been decided that Captain March would sail north 12 hours
to Belize City, where the passengers would get off and board a charter
flight for Miami.

As the passengers went down the gangplank in Belize, Hurricane Mitch became
the fourth-fiercest Atlantic storm in history, according to the National
Hurricane Center, and it was headed straight for Belize. Ten crew members,
including all the women, also got off.

Fantome was cornered by the storm. If she stayed, Burke said, she could have
been sunk or run aground. Burke said he and Captain March decided to go to
sea and take what they thought were their best chances in deep water.

In hindsight, some experts say, the company chose the ship over the crew. "I
could not have gotten under way in any direction except to the airport and
the hell out of there," said Andy Chase, who teaches tall-ship captains at
the Maine Maritime Academy.

As Fantome cleared the Belize reef at 3 P.M. on that Monday, Burke said he
and Captain March talked on satellite telephone, plotting the storm's
forecast track and their possible escape routes. They decided to run 120
miles southeast to hide behind Roatan, a long skinny Bay Island 25 miles off
the Honduras coast. Forecasters had said that the storm would stay north and
that Roatan would reduce its force.

Fantome arrived at 5 A.M. the next day, Oct. 27, and began tacking back and
forth. Seas were rough and the wind was gusting to 60 miles an hour. The
storm was 75 miles away.

But at 1 P.M. the storm turned southwest, confounding computer models at the
National Hurricane Center. "That's when things turned bad," Burke said. "It
was just not an option to stay in the path of a storm with its power." The
ship would have been blown on shore, he said.

At 1:15, Burke said, he and Captain March decided that their only hope was
to go east and thread a 25-mile reef-strewn passage between the island of
Guanaja, 10 miles away, and the Honduran shore. The waves were 15 feet high,
the winds 70 m.p.h., and Fantome was rolling heavily, Burke said. The storm
was 45 miles away, with 180-m.p.h. winds.

At 4 P.M., Fantome was south of Guanaja and heeling 40 degrees in 100-m.p.h.
winds. Captain March talked to Burke on a satellite phone line they were
keeping open. The captain, Burke said, "was in a battle for his life."

The storm and Fantome were then on the same longitude, 85.4 degrees west,
and the wind was shifting to the west. The ship, with sails down, was
entering what is called the navigable quadrant of a storm, Burke said, with
winds at her back that could have blown her to safety.

At 4:30 the telephone went dead.

Not until 7 P.M., when the National Hurricane Center issued a new storm
position, did Burke find out that the hurricane had jogged southeast and cut
Fantome off. As dark fell, the storm had been 10 miles in front of the ship.
At 10 P.M. the eye reached Guanaja.

"Then the worst thing happened," Burke said. The storm stalled for the next
30 hours.

There had been no Mayday call from the ship or signals from an emergency
beacon that is supposed to go off automatically when a ship capsizes.

Fantome had been through two smaller hurricanes, one of them on Guyan
March's first cruise, when he was a mate under Capt. Paddy Shrimpton.

But Fantome was 71 years old when it encountered Hurricane Mitch. Shrimpton
said the ship leaked when he ran her 10 years earlier.

The ship was registered in Equatorial Guinea, Africa, in order to avoid
taxes, Burke said.

Such registration also allowed it to avoid United States Coast Guard
inspection.

But Burke said the ship had been remodeled in 1993 and in May of this year
the ship was certified by an Equatorial Guinea agent as meeting the
standards of the Safety of Life at Sea Compact.

Burke said he believed the ship would have passed a Coast Guard test. But
few ships have gone through what Fantome encountered, experts said.

"It's one thing for a ship to take a hurricane for 6 hours, but 36 hours?"
said Peg Brandon, a captain and marine superintendent of the Sea Education
Association of Woods Hole, Mass. "Clearly they did the very best they could.
The storm tracked them down." The eye of Hurricane Mitch remained more than
100 miles from Belize.

Burke called families of the crew members. The eight families of the sailors
from New Amsterdam, Guyana, began a prayer vigil. They have been holding
photographs of the men in their arms for three hours nightly in the vigil
that is to end on Saturday.

Arthurlene Brusch, whose son, Vernon, was a Fantome electrician, said from
her home in New Amsterdam, "I think there is hope it is somewhere."

But as the Coast Guard searched fruitlessly, hope dimmed, and a Coast Guard
plane spotted the objects from the ship on Nov. 1.

They were retrieved by a British ship.

After determining that no person could live in the water more than a week,
the Coast Guard called off its search on Nov. 5. Burke said the company had
provided families of the crew members with two month's salaries until a
long-term settlement could be reached.

But William Huggett, a Miami lawyer who represents mariners, filed lawsuits
for the families of five crew members, seeking $1 million for each family.
He said more suits would be filed.

"Why didn't they just beach the ship and get the men off?" Huggett asked.
"That's just putting the value of the vessel over the lives of the men. It's
incredibly greedy."

Burke said he had hired Jeeps, planes and skin divers to keep looking for
survivors or victims.

"There remains a glimmer of hope that they are in the mud of a village
someplace, no phone booth, wandering around," he said.

In Par, England, Friday, Captain March's mother Jenny, 57, commodore of the
Porthpean Sailing Club where her son learned to sail, said her hope was
gone. "It would be a miracle," Mrs. March said. She said she had no plans to
sue Windjammer.

"Guyan wouldn't have sailed if he didn't think it was safe," she said.

In West Chester, Pa., Ms. Rutledge, whose Fantome voyage was canceled,
called to make reservations for a replacement cruise.

Captain March was incredibly brave, she said, adding, "He saved my life."

But her next cruise, she said, would not be in hurricane season.
__________________________________________

This Transcript was sent to me. I added a couple of notes in parentheses
with an ---ed at the end.

CNN Today

                  Fantome Disappearance Sparks Lawsuit

                  Aired November 13, 1998 - 1:27 p.m. ET

                  THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS

                  FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.

                  JEANNE MESERVE, CNN ANCHOR: The Windjammer cruise ship

                  Fantome has been missing at sea for more than two weeks.
It disappeared as
                  Hurricane Mitch blew into Central America, and now a
lawsuit is pending.

                  As CNN's Susan Candiotti explains, relatives of crew
members are blaming the cruise line.

                  (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)  ( Provided by a "Jammer who wishes to
remain anonymous--- ed)

                  SUSAN CANDIOTTI, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): It is the
Fantome's signature song: "Amazing Grace," played when the four-masted
cruise ship hoists its sails. A vacation aboard a
Windjammer Cruise Line tall ship was billed as a romantic getaway. This home
video, shot just a week  before the Fantome disappeared during Hurricane
Mitch,
is an eerie reminder of her missing crew and her captain Guyan March (ph).

                  (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

                  UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And if you drink, drink to the toast of
long life,
                  health and happiness.
                  (END VIDEO CLIP)   (according to the source this was the
Captains Dinner Toast-- ed)

                  CANDIOTTI: All 100 passengers arrived home safely, but
the captain and 30 crew members have not been heard from since October
27th. That's when the ship last called off the coast of Honduras, while
trying to outrun Mitch. At the time, the storm appeared to be headed in the
opposite
direction. Tragically,  Mitch changed course.

                  WILLIAM HUGGETT, CIVIL ATTORNEY: In my view, they put
the value of that boat over the value of the men who were sailing it. That's
an incredible
                  corporate decision of greed.

                  CANDIOTTI: Claiming the company was negligent, attorney
William Huggett
                  is suing Windjammer on behalf of at least eight families,
asking for $1 million
                  each. All live in the Caribbean or Central and South
America.

                  Windjammer declined an on camera interview, but told CNN,
quote, "The
                  decisions that were made were the safest ones possible...
By no means do
                  we value the ship more than the crew." For now, the
company has given
                  relatives of missing crew members two months pay, up to
$700, and promise a
                  trust fund for their children. Some families are skeptical
and angry. Norma
                  King fears the worst for her missing son Jerry, a member
of the crew, who
                  left behind a wife and three children.

                  NORMA KING, MOTHER OF VICTIM: If it's the worst storm, why
didn't
                  they load them to go. Save the ship, what is wrong with
the crew?

                  CANDIOTTI (on camera): Windjammer tells CNN, it is
introducing a new
                  Web page on the Internet so that, quote, "people can see
the facts."
                  Ultimately, it may be up to the courts to decide whether
the Fantome was
                  apparently a victim of tragic circumstance or negligence.

                  Susan Candiotti, CNN, Miami.

                  (END VIDEOTAPE)

                  TO PURCHASE A VIDEOTAPE OF THIS PIECE, PLEASE CALL
                  800-CNN-NEWS

 


 

This message is from the WindJammer BBS, and is a statement given at a Press Conference Tuesday, Nov. 3.  As of Wednesday night (11:45 EST) , there was no new information published that I could find, other than stories based on this Press Release.

Take Care and Have Faith.

Dean in Southern Delaware


www.windjammer.com

News for Immediate Release

Statement of Michael D. Burke,
President of Operations,
Windjammer Barefoot Cruises 
Tuesday, November 3rd, 1998.

Press Conference on Missing Ship, S/V Fantome.

Introduction: Windjammer Barefoot Cruises operates a fleet of passenger-carrying Tall Ships including the 282-foot, 4-masted schooner, Fantome. Fantome’s Summer/Fall itinerary for the last couple of years has been in the Belize and Honduran Bay Island area. Last week, Hurricane Mitch hit that region, surprising forecasters who had predicted the storm would take a Northerly track into the Yucatan. Windjammer’s office lost contact with Fantome and her 31 crew members late Tuesday afternoon when the storm moved onto its position. Here today to discuss the events leading up to this situation and the search for Fantome and her crew are:

Michael D. Burk - President of Operations, Windjammer Barefoot Cruises Captain Duke Schneider - Safety Consultant (10 years). Trains crew in emergency procedures. Retired USCG Commander

Captain Stuart Larcombe - Former Fantome Captain

James Canty - Vice President Corporate Development

Lt. Commander Mark Woodring of the U.S. Coast Guard

Michael D. Burke:

Good Morning. S/V Fantome was home ported in Omao, which is a small harbor just South of Puerto Cortez in Honduras. Fantome embarked 100 passengers Sunday afternoon for a 6 day cruise to Belize and the Barrier Reef. She had sailed this itinerary for her last two Summer/Fall seasons including trips to the Honduran Bay Islands.

Sunday the Captain and I discussed our options for avoiding the approaching hurricane. We agreed to go directly to Belize City and discharge passengers and all non-essential crew.

Our intentions were to go North past Cancun and Cozumel to get out of the area and avoid the storm. This was really our only choice at the time since the land had us locked in on two sides. Puerto Cortez, just West of Omoa, is the only harbor in the area. It is open to the North and would not have provided any protection from a North wind.

Fantome was boxed in a corner with the Yucatan peninsula to the west and Honduras to the south.

Monday at 1130 the vessel arrived at Belize City after a rough crossing and discharged her passengers who were taken to Miami on a charter flight arranged by Windjammer. Ten crew were also put ashore.

As soon as possible after the passengers were ashore the vessel again got underway making her way through the barrier reef and arriving in open water at approximately 1500 EST.

It was determined at this time that the idea of running North was no longer a safe option because of the vessels speed and the forecast for the storm to strike the Yucatan coast. There were already feeder bands of squalls reaching the beaches of Cancun and Cozumel. The wind was from the NNE and forecasted to increase. The ship did not have the speed to make the distance and out run the storm before it was forecasted to reach the coast.

Belize was also in harms way. So, the only available option was for the ship to go SE and seek shelter from the seas behind the island of Roatan. If you look at the map, you will see Roatan is a long island running East to West. This would give Fantome protection from the large swells produced by a storm such as Mitch.

The forecasted path of the storm was still WNW which would have taken it well North of Roatan and the mainland of Honduras.

At 0500 Tuesday, Oct. 27 the Fantome arrived at the South shore of Roatan and remained there until 1 pm.

She was experiencing wind from the WNW with large to moderate seas. The vessel was tacking East to West in the lee of the island. The Captain and I talked many times during the day. He reported that the ship was taking the weather find and that he was finalizing his heavy weather preparations.

The 4am and the 7am position confirmed the storm continued its track in a westerly direction. But, the 10am position of the storm showed an unexpected turn toward the SE.

Fantome was experiencing strong winds from the WNW so it was impossible for him to make any headway to the West away from the storm’s new path.

The 1pm position showed the storm’s center had jogged to the SW and was heading straight for Roatan.

At 1:15pm the Captain and I agreed that we could not remain in the path of the storm. Although the island provided protection from the seas the wind strength in Mitch was so strong that it would have been impossible for the vessel to remain stationary and not be blown south and driven ashore onto the Honduran coast.

We had only one choice and that was to run East to try to get to the Eastern semicircle of the storm where the wind would shift to the WSW and eventually South taking us away from land.

At 4pm Tuesday, Hurricane Mitch had again shifted direction. This time making a course of due South of the 1pm position. The ship and the storm were on the same longitude separated by 45 miles. The captain reported a change in the wind direction from the WNW to due West.

We were approaching our objective of getting into the safer quadrant of the storm and favorable wind direction, away from shore and away from the center of the storm. At 4:30pm we lost satellite communication with the ship. They were 10 miles SSE of Guanaja Island heading E at approximately 7 knots.

The storm’s path changed once again between 4pm and 7pm Tuesday night to the SE or directly toward the path of the ship.

At 10pm that same evening, the storm’s forward motion stopped and it remained stalled generally over the same are for the next two days.

Since that time we have attempted through every means possible to reestablish contact with the ship. Ham radio operators in the area were very cooperative and busy on our behalf.

We remained optimistic that the ship was afloat but disabled because the emergency transponder which is either manually or automatically activated by saltwater never transmitted a signal.

However, since Wednesday last week the US Coast Guard has thoroughly searched the most probable areas and has concluded that the ship is not afloat in the area. It was either out of the area or sunk.

They have since tighten up the search pattern in an attempt to find debris and other clues to the fate of Fantome.

Windjammer has been in existence for 51 years. Fantome was our biggest ship for over thirty of those years. We have six ships operating year round in the Eastern Caribbean. Every year we are threatened by approaching storms and every year we inevitable have to take evasive action to get out of harms way.

Up until now, our captains and our management team have a tremendous amount of experience in developing successful strategies to avoid these storms as our track record proves.

With Mitch and Fantome we were faced with circumstances that provided us with very few viable options. Fantome had no where to run, and with all the forecasts predicting the storm to turn toward the NW, we took the only reasonable course we had available.

We are confident that we made the best decisions possible given the information available at the time from the hurricane center at NOAA.

But doing everything right is no guarantee that the results are going to be successful. Windjammer is a small company where our most important asset is our crew. In fact, it is in large part the reason for our success. Many of the crew on the Fantome had been with the Company for many many years. We work together like family. Many of our passengers pick the ship they go on to be with some of their favorite crew members.

This tragic accident has devastated our company. This is the worst thing that has ever happened to our company.

We continue to have faith that these men were able to get into life rafts and are adrift somewhere in the Caribbean sea.

The Coast Guard continues to search the area, and we will continue to charter private aircraft, to cover area the guard is not covering.



Windjammer Barefoot Cruises, Ltd.
P.O. Box 190120, Miami Beach, FL 33119-0120

E-mail: windbc@windjammer.com

 

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