Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

 

Tragic crab boat burdened with pots - report 18.08.11

A BOAT that sank with the loss of two Inishowen fishermen was carrying crab pots and wet ropes weighing the equivalent of 12 to 14 extra people, a report has found.
Eddie Doherty (65) and his nephew Robert McLaughlin (41) died tragically when their 26 foot boat 'Jennifer' capsized off Glengad Head near their Ross Head homes on the Inishowen peninsula on the morning of November 1, last year.
The older man's body was recovered from the water shortly after the accident. However, despite extensive searches, his nephew was not found until his body washed up on a beach at Malin Head, twenty-three days later.
Fishermen Robert McLaughlin, left, and his uncle, Eddie Doherty who died off Glengad Head last year.
The Marine Casualty Investigation Board (MCIB) published its report into the tragedy yesterday. The board said that, whatever caused the fibre-glass boat to sink, "must have occurred suddenly and without warning". It blamed either wind or wave action, or a combination of the two.
It said that the vessel was in good seaworthy condition and that both men were highly experienced fishermen. However, it found that the vessel was carrying between 50 and 60 pots, each weighing between 15kgs and 16kgs.
The total estimated weight of pots and wet rope onboard at the time of the incident, was considered to be in the region of 915kg and 1,096kg or the equivalent of between 12 and 14 extra people, investigators found.
"The carrying of 50-60 pots on a boat the size of the 'Jennifer' would have a significant adverse effect on the stability of the boat," said investigators.
The scene at Portaleen Pier, Glengad, as an exhaustive search continued for 41-year old Robert McLaughlin.
Southerly Force 6 and Force 8 winds were reported, resulting in an "offshore wind giving a lee for a boat working close inshore". There were also eddies - a swirling of the sea running counter to the main water flow - prevalent in the vicinity of where the boat went down.
The family of Mr Doherty, a father-of-seven, have disputed some of the MCIB findings. His widow, Marian, said the report gave the impression that the boat was carrying "too many pots".
"With Eddie's experience and his regard for safety, the load (pots and rope) would have been spread evenly over the deck of the boat and therefore this would not have had an adverse affect (sic) on the stability of the boat," she said in a submission to the MCIB. The family also disputed the weather findings, saying conditions that morning were good but deteriorated shortly after the accident.
The MCIB report found that Mr Doherty was wearing a flotation suit when his body was recovered from the sea. Mr McLaughlin was wearing oilskins but no buoyancy aid.
In its recommendations, the MCIB called on the Minister for Transport to review the Code of Practice for Fishing Vessels Under 15m, with a view to establishing "revised appropriate stability criteria". It also recommended imposing an obligation for boats to carry an appropriate life-raft at all times as well as a float free, self-activating radio beacon.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home