Divers aboard the Nai’a, one of the more respected
liveaboards in the Pacific, were evacuated in rolling
seas when the craft was swept onto a Tonga reef by a
rogue storm on the second night of an 11-day August
whale-watching trip. According to first hand accounts,
passengers had been warned of heavy winds and went
to bed anchored off remote Luanamo Island. They
were awakened about 3:00 a.m. by the impact of the
120-foot motorsailer’s steel hull crunching into a reef.
Owner Rob Barrel told Undercurrent, “The wind shifted
180 degrees and picked up to gale force in the space of
five minutes, causing the anchor to drag until the keel
fetched up on the reef.”
Subscriber Ron Dion (San Francisco, CA) told
Undercurrent that crew members summoned all twelve
passengers to the salon, instructing them to bring life
jackets, passports, clothing and medications. Dion
and his wife also thought to don their wet suits, which
proved to be a wise decision. When the Nai’a’s engines
couldn’t drive the ship off the reef, crew members tried
to push it free with two inflatable dive skiffs. One skiff
got punctured and the crew had to be pulled from the
churning sea as the skiff turned turtle. The second
inflatable developed a leak, and skipper Jonathan Smith
decided to evacuate the passengers to the nearby deserted
island.
The crew helped passengers into the limping skiff
and took them to shore through five-foot surf. “All we
could see was foam as waves broke over the inflatable,”
recalls Dion. “It’s a miracle someone didn’t drown.”
Three crew members accompanied the passengers
ashore, toting blankets and emergency rations. The
inflatable nearly sank as crewmen returned to the Nai’a.
Doc Epstein (Key West, FL) recalls that after he and
the other passengers were unloaded, the crew “went into
the watery cabins to gather our belongings. That shows
their loyalty and professionalism.” Adds passenger Paul
Duhamel (San Francisco), “Their courage, tireless determination,
and resilience make them true heroes to us.”
Dion, an experienced yachtsman, faults the captain
for putting out only one anchor and for not starting the
engine until after the boat was aground. But he, too,
acknowledged, “I must give credit to the Fijian crew.”
After twelve rainy hours huddled under a banyan
tree, the passengers were picked up by local boatmen
who transported them to a sailing yacht that had
responded to the Nai’a’s Mayday call. They and their
luggage were then transferred to Sandy Beach Resort.
A week later, a salvage team finally managed to lift
the Nai’a off the reef and began towing her, with both
vessels chained to a barge that had gone in close to the
reef to enable the salvage. But the three-ship convoy
was hit by another freak storm with 40-50 knot winds.
The rescue barge, being towed by the MV Hifofua, was
swamped and began to submerge, threatening to pull
down the Hifofua and the Nai’a with her. The barge was
cut loose and sank, with five men escaping in a dinghy.
Eventually the Nai’a reached her home port in Fiji.
Two charters were cancelled, but the Nai’a was repaired
in time for her first scheduled charter back in Fiji on
September 20.
The Tonga passengers were offered refunds or credits
for future trips and Barrel covered their food and
lodging at Sandy Beach. (Some were there five days waiting
for connecting flights.) As Barrel’s staff continued
to find personal belongings, they informed clients by email
and offered to ship the items. Ron Dion estimates
that he lost about $2,000 worth of stuff, including personal
electronic gear that may have been ruined by salt
water. The Nai’a’s insurance only covered the ship’s hull
damage, according to Dion. He carries two separate topof-
the-line dive-accident policies -- PADI Platinum and
DAN Preferred – but discovered that neither covered his
lost possessions.
DAN’s dive-accident insurance only covers scuba gear
lost while diving. PADI’s coverage is limited to belongings
lost as the result of medical transportation. Both
policies offer maximum payouts of $2500. DAN, DEPP
and other insurers offer separate dive equipment policies,
and some homeowners insurance will cover personal
losses away from home.