On 15 June 1972, about 200 nautical miles west of the Galápagos Islands, the wooden schooner Lucette was holed by a pod of orcas and sank within minutes, leaving the six people aboard adrift in the open Pacific. They were the Robertson family — Dougal Robertson, a Scottish former merchant-navy officer turned dairy farmer; his wife Lyn; their son Douglas, then about eighteen; the twin boys Neil and Sandy, about twelve — together with Robin Williams, a young Englishman taken on as crew at Panama. All six survived. After 38 days adrift, first in an inflatable life raft and then crammed into the Lucette‘s nine- to ten-foot fibreglass dinghy Ednamair, they were picked up alive by a Japanese fishing trawler.
The ordeal was a study in deliberate, disciplined survival rather than disaster. The raft and dinghy held only a few days’ water and rations. The inflatable raft deteriorated and failed after about sixteen days, forcing all six into the tiny dinghy. From there the family built a survival regime out of almost nothing: they caught turtles and dorado and flying fish, dried strips of meat in the sun, drank turtle blood and rainwater, and rigged the dinghy to catch every shower. Dougal, drawing on his seamanship, navigated by dead reckoning toward the shipping lanes off Central America rather than waiting passively to be found, and Lyn’s nursing knowledge and improvised remedies kept the weakening bodies functioning.
The Robertsons are remembered as one of the rare cases in which an entire group, including children, came through a long open-water ordeal alive and without resorting to harming one another. They had, the family later said, explicitly resolved that they would not eat one another to survive. Dougal Robertson recorded the experience in his 1973 book Survive the Savage Sea, and later distilled its hard lessons into a survival manual; his son Douglas told the fuller story decades afterward in The Last Voyage of the Lucette. The dinghy Ednamair survives in a maritime museum as the small, battered vessel that carried six people through five weeks of open ocean.
The Andrea Gail, a 72-foot commercial swordfishing boat out of Gloucester, Massachusetts, was lost with her entire crew of six on or about 28 October 1991, somewhere east of Sable Island in the North Atlantic, in the storm later popularized as “the Perfect Storm.” No bodies were recovered and the vessel was never found. Her captain was Frank W. “Billy” Tyne Jr., 37; with him died David Sullivan, 29, and Robert “Bobby” Shatford, 30, both of Gloucester, Dale Murphy and Michael Moran of Bradenton Beach, Florida, and Alfred Pierre of New York City.
The boat sailed from Gloucester on 20 September 1991 for the swordfishing grounds of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, ranging out toward the Flemish Cap, roughly a thousand miles from home. By late October, with a full hold and failing ice, Tyne turned for port directly into the path of a meteorological convergence of rare violence: an extratropical low east of Nova Scotia that, blocked from its usual northeastward track, retrograded back toward the coast and absorbed the dying Hurricane Grace. Buoys in the region recorded seas of sixty feet and more, with one reading of 100.7 feet on the Scotian Shelf, the highest ever measured there. The Andrea Gail was steaming through the worst of it when she went silent.
The boat is remembered through Sebastian Junger’s 1997 book The Perfect Storm and the 2000 film drawn from it, which fixed her name and her crew in popular memory. But the documented core is stark and finite: a sound, well-found vessel and six experienced men, caught in open water with no margin of sea-room, sent down by a storm so anomalous that forecasters estimated its like at once in fifty to a hundred years. What exactly broke the Andrea Gail — a rogue wave, a knockdown she could not recover from, a swamping — cannot be known, because nothing came back but a scatter of debris.
On the night of 13–14 August 1979 a sudden, severe storm overwhelmed the fleet of the biennial Fastnet Race in the Celtic Sea off the southwest coast of Ireland. Fifteen competing yachtsmen died, most by drowning or exposure after their boats were capsized or abandoned; counting deaths aboard accompanying craft, the wider toll rose higher. Of the 303 yachts that had started the 605-nautical-mile race from Cowes around the Fastnet Rock to Plymouth, only 86 finished. At least 75 boats were knocked down or capsized, 5 sank, and 24 were abandoned. The rescue that followed was the largest peacetime maritime operation Britain and Ireland had then mounted, saving roughly 125 sailors.
The race had begun in ordinary August conditions. The killer was a fast-deepening depression — a small, intense low that forecasters underestimated — which crossed the racing area in the early hours of 14 August and brought Force 10 winds, officially assessed, with gusts that competitors judged Force 11, and steep, confused seas reported to 40 to 50 feet. The smaller boats, then a large share of the fleet, were caught far offshore with no shelter. Many were repeatedly rolled; crews were thrown overboard, harnesses and gear failed, life rafts capsized or broke apart, and men died waiting in the water for help that took hours to reach the scattered fleet.
The 1979 Fastnet is remembered not for a single doomed vessel but as the moment offshore yacht racing confronted its own assumptions about safety. The joint inquiry by the Royal Yachting Association and the Royal Ocean Racing Club examined hull stability, harnesses, life rafts, companionway integrity and crew qualification, and its findings reshaped the Offshore Special Regulations worldwide. The disaster’s lesson was blunt: a recreational race had sent hundreds of small boats and amateur crews into open water with a margin of safety that a single bad forecast erased.
On 27–28 December 1998 a violent storm struck the fleet of the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race in Bass Strait, the notoriously shallow and turbulent water between mainland Australia and Tasmania, killing six sailors and sinking five boats in the deadliest edition of the race’s history. Of the 115 yachts that started the 628-nautical-mile course from Sydney Harbour to Hobart on Boxing Day, only 44 finished. Seven yachts were abandoned, five of them sank, and 55 sailors were lifted to safety in what became the largest peacetime rescue operation Australia had mounted, involving some 35 aircraft and 27 Royal Australian Navy vessels.
The storm was an intense, fast-forming low — an East Coast Low that deepened explosively over Bass Strait — bringing sustained winds above 65 knots, gusts toward 80, and seas reported to 15 metres. The shallow Strait stacked the swell into steep, breaking walls that rolled and dismasted boats across the fleet. Glyn Charles was swept overboard from Sword of Orion and never recovered. Aboard Business Post Naiad, Bruce Guy died of a heart attack and Phil Skeggs drowned during repeated knockdowns. The 1942-built wooden yacht Winston Churchill broke up and sank, and three of her crew — John Dean, James Lawler and Michael Bannister — died after their life raft was overwhelmed in the seas.
The race is remembered as the disaster that ended an era of assumed invulnerability in one of yachting’s premier events. A New South Wales coronial inquest, its findings released on 12 December 2000, was sharply critical of both the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, which it found had “abdicated its responsibility to manage the race,” and the Bureau of Meteorology for failing to ensure that the deteriorating forecast reached the fleet with the force it warranted. The inquest’s recommendations reshaped the race and influenced offshore safety worldwide.