The Reef Explorer is a small and
older live-aboard boat, but surely
capable of plying the far reaches of
Australia’s Coral Sea where no other
live-aboard would venture. At least it
was while it was still operated by
Alan and Kim Payard, with whom I
journeyed a couple of times when I
reviewed the boat for Undercurrent.
They called it quits in 1997,
selling what was once the mother
ship of Ron and Valerie Taylor.
The new owners have had nothing
but trouble, stranding divers in a
dinghy on a reef and having a crew
member die due to bad air from a
faulty air compressor on board
(coupled with his having inadequate
training for his
rebreather). But the latest adventure
was surely crazier than the
fictional land of Oz for the six
American and two Spanish divers
aboard.
The trip began falling apart
from the outset. In mid-October,
while passengers patiently passed
time, the Reef Explorer departed
Port Douglas seven hours late for
its eight-day cruise to Thursday
Island. When the trip and the
diving finally began, the boat’s
dinghy leaked, the onboard hoist
broke, seals on the winch exploded,
and the batteries failed, shutting
down the navigation system,
running lights, toilets, and cabin
lights. The gas stove failed, forcing
the passengers to eat cold food for a
week. And a crew member with the
flu passed it on to most of the
passengers. Four dives a day quickly
dwindled to one a day.
Several days out, American Dr.
Fred Farin told the Australian
Courier Mail that he noticed
something was wrong when the 29-
year-old skipper, Troy Dallman,
told him the crew wanted to sink
the boat for the insurance money.
Two days later, 170 miles southeast
of Thursday Island, the
skipper started raving that the
crew wanted to mutiny. Dallman
ordered a crew member to cut the
anchor chain with a hacksaw and
then uncapped a flare gun and
held it to Farin’s head.
“It was three feet from my
face. Those flare launchers are
worse than a gun, because they
burn and you can’t put them
out,” he said. The crew and passengers retreated to the stern
after Dallman calmed down and
discussed using a fire extinguisher
to disarm him, then decided to
try to calm him down.
Rob crash-tackled the
Captain off his chair
onto the ground, and
he and others tied him
up with tape. |
Farin said chef Michael
Griffin went to the wheel house to
offer the skipper some food, and
passenger Kati Donohue started
massaging the skipper’s neck.
Then, “he just kind of burst into
tears. So I started slowly taking the
flare off the console that he had at
his fingertips,” Dr. Farin said.
During the ordeal, the boat
drifted aimlessly and crashed into
a reef. Crew member Carl Rickson
told a television reporter “You
could hear the scrape along the
bottom of the boat and that’s
when I said to (another crewman)
Rob, this is it, now. Rob ran upstairs, I ran straight through the
middle of the boat, through the
saloon, and up top. Rob crashtackled
him off the (captain’s)
chair onto the ground,” and he
and others tied him up with tape.
Rickson said, “When we had
him up on the top bunk, he saw a
vessel on our starboard and
jumped off the bunk and was
trying to jump overboard. He was
tied so he would not have survived.
I grabbed him and pulled
him down and that’s when we had
to really restrain him and hog-tie
him. He was under constant
surveillance through the night
and all through the next day.”
The ship was unharmed and
the crew guided the boat to
Thursday Island, where Dallman
was hospitalized.
The guests, after dubbing their
trip the “$3000 cruise from hell,”
filed legal action against Reef
Adventures, the owner of the boat,
seeking damages for alleged breach
of contract and negligence. Reef
Adventures’ owner, Dianne Chester,
told ABC radio she was “shocked”
by the incident and regretted any
inconvenience to passengers.
Queensland Premier Peter
Beattie subsequently issued a
warning about “rogue” dive
operators destroying the reputation
of North Queensland’s dive
industry, referring not only to this
incident but also to the dive boat
Outer Edge, which while on a dive
trip last January left two Americans
in the water to die.
— Ben Davison
This report was prepared from stories
in the Courier Mail, the Australian Associate
Press, television and radio transcripts, and
communication from our correspondents.