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Men Rescued From Sinking Boat After Sailing To Buy Pies

The inshore lifeboat with the 32ft ship Gazelle.  Two men were rescued from a sinking boat after they sailed from Wales to England - to buy pastries. Paul Hadfield sailed his 32ft ship Gazelle from Swansea to Ilfracombe in Devon - to get nine local pies, known as pasties. PHOTO BY RNLI/SWNS

Two men were rescued from a sinking boat after they sailed from Wales to England – to buy pastries.

Paul Hadfield sailed his 32ft ship Gazelle from Swansea to Ilfracombe in Devon – to get nine local pies, known as pasties.

But he and a pal were rescued by the RNLI when the vessel began sinking off the Devon coast near Baggy Point when it was hit by a large wave.

Paul has a 50-year career on boats and regularly brings the Gazelle over to Ilfracombe from his home in South Wales.

But sadly, the boat was lost – as were all the pies.

Paul said: “It’s the pastries. You can’t get anything like them in Swansea.

”We’d been in Ilfracombe for the day and I’d got nine pastries for colleagues back home.

“It was a bit snotty as it is around Baggy but we weren’t horsing it, just easing around to the quieter waters.

”Then a wave hit us and there was pretty sick swell so I think that is what did it – the wave popped out the saloon window and rushed in and the volume of water already on the foredeck from the swell also swamped us and suddenly we had water up to our knees in the saloon”.

They set the bilge pumps going to get rid of the water and tried to ease the boat very slowly south-west to get away from Baggy and back towards Ilfracombe but they were taking on far more water then than they could pump out.

“I could see those nine pastries were already floating,” he remembers.

“We knew that trying anything more was just going to cause personal risk to ourselves. It wasn’t worth trying anything more.

”I knew this wasn’t going to end well like it does in the movies.”

After the Coastguard received Paul’s call for assistance, they tasked the lifeboat crews who quickly found the Gazelle.

They took Paul and his colleague straight off the boat and then attached ropes to begin to tow it back to Ilfracombe Harbour.

Sadly, after a short time, the boat began to sink.

Paul, sitting inside the lifeboat at the time, remembers “I heard the engines of the lifeboat ease back and I thought “that’s it, she’s on her way.’”

The all-weather lifeboat returning to the harbor with Paul, his fellow sailor, and pieces of debris from the Gazelle. Since the sinking, the Gazelle has been breaking up with various pieces of debris having already been retrieved by the lifeboat including the Gazelle’s wheelhouse roof. PHOTO BY RNLI/SWNS

Since the sinking, the Gazelle has been breaking up with various pieces of debris having already been retrieved by the lifeboat including the Gazelle’s wheelhouse roof.

Stuart Carpenter, Coxswain on the all-weather lifeboat that day, said “The two men were absolutely right to call for help: they were in an extremely precarious situation with the boat taking on so much water so quickly.

”Our first priority is always to rescue people before vessels and we are very pleased we were able to do that on this occasion. As we found out, the Gazelle had only minutes before sinking – if her crew had not been so cautious and called the Coastguard when they did, they could have been in the water with their boat.”

The Gazelle was a former race cruiser built more than 50 years ago in 1972. Paul and his family feel the loss of her greatly. “She’d had a complete refurb just before Covid,” he says “and so she had another 50 years in her I’m sure.”

Paul described the sinking as “a day I will never forget.” All is not lost, however, he already has plans to visit Ilfracombe again to buy some more pastries.

Produced in association with SWNS Talker

Edited by Saba Fatima and Newsdesk Manager

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