British sailor rescued after being knocked out in Southern Ocean storm
London: A cargo ship has rescued a British sailor after a violent storm ripped off her mast and flung her yacht end-over-end in the Southern Ocean as she competed in a solo round-the-world race.
British sailor Susie Goodall tweeted "ON THE SHIP!!!" soon after the Hong Kong- registered MV Tian Fu arrived at her location on Friday. The cargo vessel had been traveling from China to Argentina when it diverted to reach her.
Race officials have been in regular radio contact with the 29-year-old Goodall, who lost her mast 3200 kilometres west of Cape Horn near the southern tip of South America.
Her rescue unfolded early on Friday, when the Tian Fu found Goodall an hour before daylight. In a message to race officials at 1115 GMT, she confirmed that she had sighted the Tian Fu and that sea swells were up to 4 metres high.
Those conditions make a rescue more difficult, said Paul Owen of the International Federation of Shipmasters' Associations.
"It's not a very hospitable place," Owen, a former captain, said.
But that was only the beginning of her troubles on Friday.
Goodall's engine failed and could not be restarted, limiting her ability to manoeuvre. Without an engine, her stricken yacht, the DHL Starlight, had to drift with its sea anchor before the master of the MV Tian Fu could manoeuvre the 40,000 tonne cargo ship alongside it.
Goodall was the youngest entrant and the only woman in the Golden Globe competition that began in Les Sables-d'Olonne, France, on July 1.
Only five of the 18 skippers who began the race still remain. They are trying to sail roughly 48,300 kilometres alone, non-stop and without outside assistance before returning to the same French port.
AP