Vancouver Sun

Aerial search finds no sign of fishermen or boat lost off N.S.

Only one body recovered so far from crew of six

- MICHAEL TUTTON

For Lori Phillips, waiting for news of a son lost at sea is painful, as she says closure could begin with his body’s return from the Bay of Fundy.

An aerial search continued Sunday for some sign of the five fishermen, including the captain, who haven’t been found since Tuesday’s early morning sinking of the scallop dragger Chief William Saulis off Nova Scotia’s southwest coast.

As of Sunday at 4 p.m. local time, crewman Michael Drake is the only one of the six people on board whose body has been recovered by search teams.

Phillips says she hopes desperatel­y her son Aaron Cogswell and the others still missing can be located as well, whether by searches or raising the vessel. The other men still missing are Leonard Gabriel, Daniel Forbes, Eugene Francis and the boat’s captain, Charles Roberts.

Drake’s younger sister, Raelene Carroll, has confirmed in an earlier interview with The Canadian Press it was her brother whose body was recovered Tuesday.

Drake, 48, was from Fortune, N.L., on the province’s Burin Peninsula.

Phillips described her son as a man who loved to be busy, whether at home or on the sea. “The busier it was, the happier he was,” she recalled.

Phillips says she’s anxious to have a daily call from the RCMP and search officials to let her know how the effort is proceeding, “just to let me know where things are going.”

As of mid-Sunday afternoon, an aerial search had not yielded any signs of the men or of the boat, said Sgt. Andrew Joyce, an RCMP spokesman providing updates on the search.

“We are all in this together. We want to find these five fishermen ... to bring closure to all. It’s affected our whole province. We feel it even more so especially at this time of year,” he said in a telephone interview on Sunday.

Asked how long the search will continue, Joyce said it will be assessed each day.

“Hopefully, we will locate them before we will make the very, very difficult decision of ending (the search) ... It isn’t a decision we look upon lightly,” he said.

The ground search has been ended due to safety considerat­ions, after one ground searcher fell and suffered an injury. “The venture was too dangerous to risk having another tragedy,” said Joyce.

The 15-metre scallop dragger is owned by Yarmouth Sea Products, which said in a Thursday news release the boat had been operating out of Digby.

The owners said “an unknown event” caused the vessel to capsize as no distress call is known to have been made by radio.

The company says that on Monday, the forecast indicated that the weather would deteriorat­e later in the day and into Tuesday and that as a result, vessels departed the fishing grounds in the bay and were heading back to Digby.

Richard Karsten, a professor of mathematic­s at Acadia University in Wolfville, said in an interview Sunday that at the time the emergency signal was received, tides were low in that area of the Bay of Fundy.

As the tides were ebbing, flowing out of the bay, they would have been colliding with the forceful winds coming in the opposite direction, causing large waves and swells, he explained.

Karsten, who does numerical modelling of ocean tidal flows, said with two- to three-metre waves and swells coming up the bay, it could create dangerous surf.

“When you have current going against the waves, it compresses the wave together. A long, smooth swell can be compressed and become a sharper, compressed wave, like on a beach,” he explained

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A member of a search party walks along the shore of the Bay of Fundy, looking for signs of the scallop dragger Chief William Saulis and her crew.
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS A member of a search party walks along the shore of the Bay of Fundy, looking for signs of the scallop dragger Chief William Saulis and her crew.

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