Story Published:
Jun 14, 2003 at 7:13 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:04 AM PDT
PORTLAND - A charter fishing boat battered by rough
surf turned parallel to the tall wave that flipped it over just
before the capsizing that killed at least nine people, survivors
said Sunday.
"We went through a couple rough waves and turned north to try
to get around a pretty large wave but then it crashed into the
side," said Tyler Bohnet, 28, of Canby. He was on a fishing trip
with his father, Sigmund Bohnet, who died in the Saturday morning
accident off the Oregon coast aboard the 32-foot Taki Tooo.
Two men remained missing in the capsizing, but an ocean search
was called off Sunday morning because they could not have survived
so long in the 50-degree water.
Eight people, including Mark Hamlett and his sons Chris and
Daniel, survived by swimming a few hundred yards toward land.
Hamlett told KOIN-TV of Portland there were two 12- to 15-foot
waves, followed by one that was at least 20 feet high.
He said the captain "turned from the west to the north and was
parallel to the wave, and I mean, I saw it coming.
"When we rolled, I did not expect to take another breath,"
said Hamlett, of Portland.
National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Ted Lopatkiewicz
said the deckhand on the boat told investigators the vessel turned
about 30 degrees to the north before the accident. But he added,
"We can't point out any particular fact as more important than
anything else at this point."
NTSB official John Goglia said it would take time to determine
the cause of the capsizing. He said Sunday evening that maintenance
had been done on the boat's throttle several days before the
accident, but it was unclear whether that work played a role.
Goglia also raised questions about the decision to send the
small vessel out. Rough conditions had closed the northern Oregon
harbor to recreational boats, but not to charter boats.
"If the surf was worse yesterday than it is today, I would have
some issues going out in a boat this size," Goglia said Sunday,
when the ocean was calmer and restrictions for recreational boats
had been lifted. "But that may be my personal fear."
Three other charter fishing boats had left safely from the same
area Saturday morning, said Tillamook County sheriff's department
Marine Deputy Paul Fournier.
Goglia told reporters the investigation will examine the
condition of the ocean when the boat set out early Saturday, as
well as the boat itself and its equipment.
The Taki Tooo had been filled with fathers, sons and friends out
for a Father's Day weekend fishing trip. It had just cleared a
long, rocky jetty extending from the mouth of Tillamook Bay, an
area known for high waves and swirling currents, when a wave
broadsided it.
Barry Sundberg and his friends had gone on a fishing trip
together every year for the last 10 years, said his wife, Marsha,
of Cheney, Wash. He and Tim Albus of Madras remained missing
Sunday.
"He died doing something he loved, and we're all going to miss
him. It won't be the same without him," she said. "It's one thing
you never think about - your spouse dying away from you and you
can't say goodbye to him because you don't know where he's at."
The search for bodies continued Sunday along the beach, where
federal investigators collected the remaining soaked life jackets
that had washed up from the wreck.
Investigators' most definite conclusion about Saturday's
capsizing at the mouth of Tillamook Bay concerned the importance of
life jackets. The boat's orange vests were worn by all eight
survivors and none of those found dead.
Bohnet said most people on the deck were thrown off the boat
when the wave hit.
"I was able to swim to a life raft that was floating but I kept
getting knocked off it until I couldn't get on it again," he said.
"Then I tried swimming to shore until I got to shallow enough
water that some men came out and helped me."
Coast Guard Master Chief Lars Kent said that after a witness
reported seeing the boat capsize, people on the beach, including
the pastor of a local church, helped pull some of the survivors
from the water and help them to shore.
The survivors - ages 13 to 48 - were treated at a hospital for
hypothermia and released. The dead ranged in age from their late
teens to their 50s.
The nine people who died Saturday were: Richard Hidalgo of Green
Bay, Wis.; Dennis Tipton and Kathy Corley, both of Ukiah; Tim
Albus' brother, Steve Albus, of Ephrata, Wash.; Sigmund Bohnet,
from Florida; Edward Loll of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Larry Frick of
Spokane, Wash.; Terry Galloway of Portland; and the boat's captain,
Doug Davis of Garibaldi.
The survivors were Bohnet; the Hamletts; Brian Loll of
Vancouver, Wash.; Richard Forsman of Vancouver, Wash.; Dale Brown
of Portland; and Tamara Buell, the boat's deckhand and Mick Buell's
daughter.
Buell, 22, offered her condolences to the victims' families
Sunday but declined to comment on the accident.
The Taki Tooo was believed to have enough life jackets for all
aboard, although passengers and crew are not required by law to
wear them.