Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sharks and lost hope: 2 women rescued after 5 months at sea

- BY CALEB JONES

HONOLULU — The planned voyage from Hawaii to Tahiti aboard a 50-foot sailboat didn’t start off well for two Honolulu women. One of their cellphones was washed overboard and sank to the bottom on their first day at sea.

From there, things got worse. Much worse.

About a month into their trip, flooding from a storm crippled their engine. The 57-foot mast was damaged. And then, as they drifted thousands of miles in what turned out to be a five-month ordeal in the middle of the Pacific, the water purifier conked out and sharks started attacking the boat.

Every day for 98 days straight, the women sent out a distress call to no avail.

But the two sailors, accompanie­d by their dogs, were resourcefu­l and well-prepared with more than a year’s worth of food, and on Wednesday they were finally rescued by the U.S. Navy about 900 miles off Japan and thousands of miles from their destinatio­n.

“Thank God we’ve been rescued,” Jennifer Appel, 48, told reporters in a teleconfer­ence arranged aboard a Navy ship. “I had tears in my eyes. It was incredibly emotional.”

The USS Ashland picked up Appel and Tasha Fuiava after a Taiwanese fishing vessel spotted their crippled boat Tuesday and alerted the Coast Guard.

In photos and video provided by the Navy, one of the women blew kisses as a rescue boat approached. Both women and their dogs, Valentine and Zeus, looked fit and vigorous. Fuiava flashed a smile as she climbed a ladder onto the Ashland.

Asked if they ever thought they might not survive, Appel said they would not be human if they did not. She credited the dogs with keeping their spirits up.

“There is a true humility to wondering if today is your last day, if tonight is your last night,” she said.

Appel, an experience­d sailor, said Fuiava had never sailed a day in her life before being invited along. They set out in early May on what was supposed to be a 2,700-mile journey but lost their engine in bad weather near the end of the month.

They thought they could still reach Tahiti by sail, but the damage to their mast made it difficult to make any headway.

Twice, sharks menaced them.

“They were horrific,” Appel said.

A group of five tiger sharks apparently decided to use the sailboat to teach two younger sharks how to hunt, attacking the vessel at night, she recalled. The next morning, a shark returned and rammed the boat.

“We were just incredibly lucky that our hull was strong enough to withstand the onslaught,” Appel said.

But the experience wasn’t all the stuff that nightmares are made of. They said they enjoyed learning about the sea and the weather. “We got to figure out how the ocean works,” Appel said.

Said Fuiava: “You may as well use the time you have to do something beneficial.”

 ?? MASS COMMUNICAT­ION SPECIALIST 3RD CLASS JONATHAN CLAY/U.S. NAVY VIA AP ?? USS Ashland Command Master Chief Gary Wise welcomes aboard Jennifer Appel, an American mariner, one of two Honolulu women and their dogs who were rescued after being lost at sea for several months while trying to sail from Hawaii to Tahiti.
MASS COMMUNICAT­ION SPECIALIST 3RD CLASS JONATHAN CLAY/U.S. NAVY VIA AP USS Ashland Command Master Chief Gary Wise welcomes aboard Jennifer Appel, an American mariner, one of two Honolulu women and their dogs who were rescued after being lost at sea for several months while trying to sail from Hawaii to Tahiti.

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