Imagine you are at the edge of the sea on a day when it is difficult to say where the land ends and the sea begins and where the sea ends and the sky begins. Sea kayaking lets you explore these and your own boundaries and broadens your horizons. Sea kayaking is the new mountaineering.
Saturday, May 12, 2007
The wreck of the Kartli
The west coast of Gigha is a wild place. Southwesterly storms sweep in from the Atlantic, past the Mull of Oa on Islay, and dash their energy on the rocks of this fair isle.
The Kartli was a huge 240 foot Russian fish factory ship. During a storm on December 18th 1991 her wheelhouse was smashed and her engine room and generator flooded by a giant wave off the south of Islay. Four of her crew were killed and 15 were seriously injured. With no power or steerage, she rolled helplessly at the mercy of the wind and seas. Five helicopters were involved in a dramatic and successful rescue of all her surviving crew.
Her abandoned hulk drifted relentlessly downwind to her ultimate resting place on the rocks of Gigha where her plates were pounded asunder.
Even on a calm and sunny day, her rusting hulk remains as a reminder of the transient nature of man's dominion over the seas and the our fleeting existence on this earth.
Labels:
Gigha,
Islay,
Mull of Oa,
weather,
wrecks
Hi Douglas,
ReplyDeleteThe last time I was in the area of the wreck (around 8 years ago) there was masses of rubbish washed onto the shore from the vessel, including much polystyrene, presumably from fish boxes. Has this now disappeared?
Hello Phil it is not as bad as it was. However there is still a lot of plastic rubbish round several of the more inaccessible parts of the Gigha shoreline.
ReplyDelete