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Hell on earth
Not sure if you need a subscription to read this but a diving boat caught fire off the Santa Barbara coast this morning, (Santa Cruz Island), and sank w 33 people trapped below deck, sleeping.
Jesus Christ...:(:( https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-09-02/massive-rescue-operation-after-dozens-trapped-in-boat-fire-off-santa-barbara |
.... Oh crap... Awful way to go :(
RIP |
It really makes me wonder when it's reported all the crew got off, but no one else did.
RIP to those that didn't. Not the way I would want to go out. |
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All the 'clients' were in small bunks below... could not get out. Bunks are a 2 or 3-high bunk beds... small and crowded. Idea is to get the max number of people on the boat. https://www.truthaquatics.com/conception/ |
Also client bunks were near the engine room at the lowest point below deck. Probably asphyxiated in their sleep from the smoke. RIP.
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I have nightmares about being trapped in an air pocket on a sinking ship. From what I see it’s still partially afloat. Hope they keep searching.
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That's horrible....RIP.
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I hope they died quick... Being lit up like that.... ****
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I used to do a lot of long distance sailboat racing and fire is always in the back of your mind at night when you're off watch. RIP.
https://goods.truthaquatics.com/u/si...e-1200x447.jpg https://goods.truthaquatics.com/u/si...2-1200x800.jpg https://goods.truthaquatics.com/u/si...unk-layout.png |
Looks like it was a really nice boat. I just can’t understand how a fire could grow that large so fast before people would have a chance to get off the boat(?)...
So awful. :( |
Oh my God... I cannot imagine what they must have gone through. The most "merciful" way to go would to have simply been asphyxiated in their sleep. Anything else would have been the stuff of our worst nightmares.
We used to head out on similar boats to catch the tuna as they migrated by off the Washington coast. A typical day was on board at midnight for a six to eight hour run out to the fish. The boats are identical to this, with the below decks bunks and all of that. I've spent a lot of time in those kinds of bunks. What struck me then, and strikes me now once again about these boats is the relative lack of egress from those bunks. One way in, one way out, and it's narrow as hell with a very steep "stairway" that's really more of a ladder. If you are claustrophobic at all, it feels very, very confined. Hell, even if you are not, it does. I cannot believe there is no requirement for emergency escape routes. Or a requirement to have the bunks away from the engine room, or higher up in the boat, or something. It seems that if one had any other options, below decks by the engine room would be last on the list. |
Ugh.
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The bunks were below the galley. Not the safest place to be.
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Horrific. Godspeed to all effected.
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With that many souls on board, why would it not be a requirement to have someone awake and on watch at all times, even at night?
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Could have been an explosion in the galley. Any crew topside has no chance of being a hero, lucky to have time to jump/ be blown into the water. |
watching live press conference on Santa Barbara's KEYT, still limited information but search on going. Boat has sunk and is inverted.
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Such a scenario raises what is, to me, a painfully obvious questions - wouldn't there be some sort of a detection mechanism and an alarm that would sound under these conditions? |
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