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| S/V JOY |
When I (Verena) was in my mid teens my parents and I hopped aboard our 38' sloop JOY and sailed from Germany to California...
I was born in Germany to German parents and had visited the US a few times during summer vacations. My dad had visited several times before my mom and I came into the picture and fell in love with southern California. His goal was to move there as soon as he could. By the time I was 14 his dream was to become a reality when we received our green cards!
Since sailing was my dad's other big passion he decided to sail to our new home rather than simply fly and bought a brand new Dehler 38 just shortly before we were about to leave. We had all been taking sailing lessons and my dad went on several sailing trips and got his captain's license. In August of 1987 we departed Germany. Here is the map of our entire trip of over 10,000 miles.
| Verena and her parents aboard JOY in the Canary Islands. 1987 |
View Germany to San Diego aboard JOY in a larger map
After leaving Germany we sailed down the coast to France and eventually crossed the English channel as we had done a few years earlier during one of our "practice runs" (aka family vacations). We stayed in Plymouth for several weeks while getting upgrades such as a roller furling headsail. When a good weather window presented itself we set sail to cross the Bay of Biscay. Our longest crossing to date. All went well and we arrived in A Coruña unscathed.
View Aveiro Dinghy Capsize in a larger map
We sailed on to the Canary Islands from where we would cross the Atlantic. For the crossing we participated in the 1987 Atlantic Rally for Cruisers (ARC). Recently, I was able to get the Cruising World article about the ARC '87 and we are mentioned toward the end for the collection my dad and I took up to help out the Canadian crew that lost their boat on the reef.
A couple weeks into our 21 day Atlantic crossing we were sailing along nicely while I was fast asleep in my bunk. It was that magic time when things always seem to go wrong - around 2am. I was awoken by a loud thud and a strong jerk which felt like the boat had come to a sudden stop. It was all hands on deck. The boat had indeed stopped moving though the sails were still full and trying to pulling the boat. We checked the bilge for any intrusion of water and after finding a slow trickle we grabbed some flashlights and checked around the boat. And there they were: faded orange buoys attached to an old fishing net surrounding our boat. We pulled up on the net and started cutting it back but it just kept going and going like one of those magic handkerchiefs. In the beam of the flashlight we could see a thick line run from what seemed to be the center of the boat down into the deep blue. We later learned it had been hung up on the propeller shaft and broken our strut in half.
After having seen but one boat in the past two weeks my mom suddenly saw a light on the horizon. We called them on the VHF and they responded immediately. We told them of our troubles and they offered to help. When they pulled up next to us we were looking at a 55 meter luxury yacht - the Lady Ghislane of London owned by British billionaire Robert Maxwell.
They offered to have their divers cut us loose in the morning but until then they did not want to waste time by waiting around. They tossed us a line and proceeded to tow us through the rest of the night at 10-12 knots! We had never seen those kind of speeds on our boat and it was not without some damage. We had a few bent stanchions and nearly ripped the cleats out of the deck before we attached the tow line to the mast.
| The buoys that broke our strut mid-Atlantic |
At first light the two divers cut away the rest of the net and line. We had a slow leak the rest of the crossing and in Barbados hauled the boat to weld the strut and paint the bottom.
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| The broken strut |
The owner billionaire tragically fell of his lovely ship a few years after our chance meeting.
This story was featured in an older edition of Jimmy Cornell's book "World Cruising Handbook".
More stories to come as I have time....
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| My old German passport filled with stamps |
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| Swimming in the Caribbean |
| V rowing the dinghy |
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| San Blas Islands |
| Transiting the Panama Canal |
| Boobies on the bow off Mexico |
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| Preparing to enter the US at San Diego - Our new home! |





