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Sea Shepherd ship severely damaged by rogue wave

03/01/2012 09:54:32
whales/whales_2010/sea_shepherd_damage

The Brigitte Bardot was damaged by huge waves. Photo credit: Simon Ager/Sea Shepherd

Steve Irwin responding to distress call from the Brigitte Bardot

January 2012. While fighting heavy seas in pursuit of the Japanese whaling fleet, the Sea Shepherd scout vessel Brigitte Bardot was struck by a rogue wave that has cracked the hull and severely damaged one of the pontoons on the vessel.

Captain Paul Watson, founder of Sea Shepherd, is onboard the Sea Shepherd flagship Steve Irwin. Captain Shepherd reported that they are fighting heavy seas to reach the position of the Brigitte Bardot some 240 miles to the southeast. It was expected to take twenty hours to reach the damaged vessel. The Brigitte Bardot was some 1500 miles southwest of Fremantle, Western Australia.

Brigitte Bardot Captain Jonathan Miles Renecle of South Africa was pursuing the Japanese factory ship Nisshin Maru in six metre swells when the wave slammed into the port side of the vessel cracking the hull. The crack has been getting wider as the seas continue to pound the vessel. Captain Renecle is confident that the ship will stay afloat until the Steve Irwin arrives. The Brigitte Bardot has a crew of ten: three British, three American, one Australian, one Canadian, one Belgian and one South African.

Damage to the Brigitte Bardot. Photo credit: Simon Ager/Sea Shepherd

Damage to the Brigitte Bardot. Photo credit: Simon Ager/Sea Shepherd

The Sea Shepherd ship Bob Barker will continue in pursuit of the whaling fleet. The Steve Irwin will assist the Brigitte Bardot, first to see to the safety of the crew, and then to escort the vessel to Fremantle for repairs.

"This is disappointing but these are hostile seas and we have always been prepared for situations like this," Said Captain Paul Watson from the Steve Irwin. "Right now the safety of my crew on the Brigitte Bardot is our priority and we intend to reach the crew and then do what we can to save our ship."

The Steve Irwin and the Brigitte Bardot are now struggling slowly northward through another storm.

 

“We are watching the Brigitte Bardot very closely,” said Captain Paul Watson. “The seas are getting rougher and the winds are increasing and there is a great deal of pressure being put on the damaged pontoon of the Brigitte Bardot. It looks like we will have to struggle through these conditions for another 24 hours.”

 

The crew of the Brigitte Bardot are wearing their survival suits around the clock. A story in the West Australian claiming that Sea Shepherd abandoned the crew of the Brigitte Bardot is false and misleading. The Japanese government security ship Shonan Maru #2 continues to tail the Steve Irwin and the Brigitte Bardot.

 

Brigitte Bardot in happier days. Photo credit: Michelle McCarron

Brigitte Bardot in happier days. Photo credit: Michelle McCarron

Bob Barker continues to pursue whaling fleet
The Sea Shepherd ship Bob Barker continues to pursue the Japanese whaling fleet. It may take two weeks for the Steve Irwin to rejoin the chase, but last season the Bob Barker was successful in shutting down the whaling operations on its own.

 

“This is not going to be a successful year for the whalers,” said Bob Barker First Officer Peter Hammarstedt of Sweden. “They have never arrived so late before and they have spent more money for security to protect the whalers from Sea Shepherd than they will ever gain this year from profits from whaling.  We continue to pursue them as they continue to run eastward to avoid us. We will not let up on them until they leave the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.”

 

This is the eighth year that Sea Shepherd has come to the Southern Ocean to intervene against illegal Japanese whaling. “Our objective from the beginning was to sink the Japanese whaling fleet economically, to bankrupt them. We have succeeded in doing so,” said Captain Paul Watson. 

More about the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society 

 

Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment

Not only bankrupt them, but sink them Too.

Is it not about time these whalers got the message? They are a dying trade, no one wants them anymore, only some small minority of sick and brain-washed Japanese, who have been brought up SELFISHLY, only thinking about themselves and not our numerous and beautiful creatures of the oceans! If I only had a Submarine I can tell you now, EVERY torpedo would be fired at a whaler vessel and after rescuing the crew, I would gladly watch the ship slowly sink beneath the waves! Give those beautiful whales a new toy to play with!

Posted by: Jain Barrington-Wright | 04 Jan 2012 22:36:36

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