Re-enactment gone wrong.

We’ve written about a variety of re-enactment voyages over the last few years; The Las Balsas raft voyage of the 1970’s, the The LAPITA Voyage in the 2000’s and The SARIMANOK in the 1980’s perhaps the most interesting of them all. Most of them had their fair share of success, but the points they were trying to prove often got lost amongst celebrations of the achievement that they accomplished.

So I was surprised that we missed this story from earlier this year. It’s from the The Maritime Executive and tells of a re-enactment that went horribly wrong.


American Adventurer Dies in Reenactment of Viking Voyage

All images Courtesy Sail2North

Courtesy Sail2North

On 28th August an American national was killed and five survivors were rescued after a Viking ship replica sank in foul weather off the coast of Norway.

The crew - an international team of adventurers - were attempting to recreate a Viking voyage using period-appropriate technology. They had set off in a 30-foot wooden skiff powered by oars and sails, bound from the Faroe Islands to Alesund, Norway. Their vessel, dubbed Naddoddur, was named for historical Norwegian explorer Naddodd, the discoverer of Iceland. The boat had a successful history of navigation in the North Sea and the Norwegian Sea on past expeditions. 

In pre-voyage blog posts, the organizers noted that they were aware that conditions wouldn't be "particularly calm," and they conducted safety trainings in advance for capsizings and other potential emergencies. Some of the crewmembers were experienced in ocean crossings, including Livar Nysted, a world-record-holding ocean rower from the Faroe Islands.

On Tuesday, when they were about 60 miles off the port of Stad on Norway's west coast, they encountered rough conditions with waves of up to 15 feet. The crew sent a mayday at about 1800 hours Tuesday evening, according to Norwegian authorities, and a helicopter was dispatched to the scene. The aircrew found that the boat was not in distress and had issued a false alarm, according to Norwegian media. 

One hour later, the boat capsized, sending all six people over the side. A large-scale search with helicopters and surface assets ensued, aided by good Samaritan vessels. Conditions were difficult, with low visibility, high waves, winds of up to 40 knots and intermittent heavy rain. 

Courtesy Norwegian Coast Guard

Five were rescued, but one remained missing, and the search continued into the night. The Norwegian Coast Guard vessel KV Bergen discovered the remains of a female passenger hours later.

Officials withheld the name of the deceased, but the expedition organizers have confirmed that the victim was U.S. resident Karla Dana, 29. The five survivors have been identified as skipper Andy Fitze, Livar Nysted, Saeny Blaser, Georg Aebi and Martin Fitze; all were in good health and uninjured.

Previous
Previous

“Out on the Patio We'd Sit”

Next
Next

Fishing/Racing Relationships