|
Beach walkers make their way Friday past the scallop trawler Nanami, which
ran aground Nov. 14 on Kiawah Island.
KIAWAH ISLAND — A 77-foot scallop trawler that's been stuck in the sand for
a week is likely to stay there at least several more days, U.S. Coast Guard
officials said Friday.
Residents seem assured the odd intruder on the eastern edge of their island
paradise presents no immediate threat, and have in fact become fascinated by
it, Kiawah Island Enforcement Officer Rusty Lameo said.
"It's not an environmental hazard," Lameo said, noting the containment
efforts of the Coast Guard, the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental
Control and Charleston Marine Services. "Of course, anything that appears on
the beach becomes a curiosity. People want to go out and see it and stand by
it and get their picture taken."
About eight years ago, a 52-foot ocean cruiser hung up on the sand bars and
remained there for about two weeks, Lameo said.
The trawler Nanami is beached on the eastern edge of the island, well behind
the security gate. Nearby houses are several hundred yards from the water.
Like a beached whale, this vessel can't be moved out to sea until the tide
comes in enough to lift it. That won't happen until at least Tuesday, Coast
Guard Lt. Cmdr. Eric King said.
Meanwhile, workers siphoned off fuel and built a containment barrier around
the boat. The Coast Guard will bill the owners for the cost of getting the
vessel back in the water, King said.
Previous Story
Boat runs aground off
Kiawah Island, published 11/16/08
The trawler washed up on the beach Nov. 14 after its anchor chain broke the
night before. The boat had already been in trouble several times as it
limped down the East Coast.
The captain and a crewman started out sometime last month from New Jersey.
They were heading down to Rockville to be retrofitted for fishing, according
to the Coast Guard.
The captain is Greg Cooper, 52, of Cape May. He's staying in the Charleston
area while the boat is put back to sea, according to the Coast Guard.
The crewman was Nora Kim, 47, of Pennsauken. He went back to New Jersey to
join his daughter, Mary Kim, who owns the trawler.
They had not gone far before the Coast Guard ordered them to pull into
Lewes, Del., to clean up the boat before proceeding, according to a story in
the Cape Gazette, the local newspaper. They stayed about a week and left
Nov. 1. Mayor Jim Ford told the Gazette the crew left without paying the
docking fees and also destroyed a piling on their way out. City officials
could not be reached Friday afternoon.
When Cooper and Kim pulled out of Lewes, they took with them a homeless
refugee from New Orleans who had been featured in the Gazette a few days
earlier, witnesses told the news-paper there.
Three days later, the trawler broke down off Cape Hatteras, N.C. The Coast
Guard Cutters Vigorous and Block Island spent the better part of two days
towing it to Southport, N.C., Lt. Scott McCrew with Coast Guard Sector North
Carolina said.
The trawler's next notable stop was Georgetown, where they dropped off the
homeless woman, Coast Guard Lt. Jg. Jim Litzinger said.
Charleston Marine Services plans to dig a trench around the boat Monday to
get it ready to float, according to Terry Yarborough, DHEC's emergency
response coordinator. "I've dealt with quite a few sinking vessels in my
day, but this is the most bizarre," he said.
|