Monday, July 14, 2025
Project: BlueGame BGF45
Sunday, July 13, 2025
Azimut Yacht Wrecked by Fire in Bodrum, Mugla, Turkey
Sealine Yacht Destroyed by Fire at Dalyan Marina, Turkey
Improve-it = Cantiere delle Marche Darwin 102
Saturday, July 12, 2025
Itama Sport Cruiser Sinks in Salins Beach, St. Tropez
One Injured as Sport Yacht Blasts Into Cala Cecata, Ponza
New Model: Baglietto DOM 115
Friday, July 11, 2025
Skipper Saved as Power Catamaran Sinks at Massa Lubrense, Naples
Two Crew Injured as Classic Super Yacht Goes Ablaze in St. Tropez
Project: Azimut Grande 25M
Thursday, July 10, 2025
Traditional Cruiser Destroyed by Fire in Marina di Stabia, Naples
Boaters Injured as Sea Ray Ends Aground in Beach Haven, New Jersey
New Model: Galeon 435 GTI
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
Projects: Beneteau Swift Trawler 37 Fly, Beneteau Swift Trawler 37 Sedan
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
New Model: XL Marine 55 WA
Monday, July 7, 2025
Project: Aquila 46 Yacht
Sunday, July 6, 2025
Extra Yachts New Web Site
X76 2018-22 (2) *Francesco Guida design
X86 2019-20 (2)
X93 2019 (1)
130 Alloy 2019 (1)
X96 Triplex 2021-24 (3)
X99 2022-23 (2)
X90 Fast 2025- (2
Saturday, July 5, 2025
Seven Injured as Sea Ray Cruiser Explodes on Lake Lanier
New Launch: Delta Marine 110
Friday, July 4, 2025
Storm in Block Island Creates Havoc, Two Boats End Beached
Project: Baia Magnifica 112
Thursday, July 3, 2025
New Model: Sasga Menorquin 35 HT
Wednesday, July 2, 2025
Project: Riva Aquariva Special 10.07 m
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
Fairline Cruiser Saved from Fire in Formentera
San Lorenzo Super Yacht Collides Into Es Puyols Reef, Formentera
One Injured as Boat Explodes in Yellowknife, Canada
Two Injured in Classic Boat Fire in Orange Beach, Alabama
Bayesian Lifting Operation
The famous 56 meter super sailing sloop Bayesian which stole the headlines in nineteen August and following days and weeks, has finally been floated again on Saturday 21 June, and then dry-docked on Sunday 22 June in nearby Termini Imerese. An operation which started on first May and took fifty days to complete, for a lifting operation which saw Hebo-Lift 2 and Hebo-Lift 10 involved, take the record breaking x-largest mast super yacht up from its wreckage point fifty meters down from the sea bed, and rumoured to cost around thirty million Euros. This lifting operation aims to put a clearer picture on those early hours of nineteen August, and how this World cruising super yacht sank so fast while at anchor, taking the lives of the owner Mike Lynch, his daughter, four other guests, and the yacht's chef.
The Bayesian lifting operation also took a life, as on the ninth May a 39 year old diver lost his life during wreckage inspection. Because of this, it was an operation that took longer then anticipated, and was fully completed on the 25 June, when the famous aluminium made 72 meter long mast was taken near the yacht's wreck after being lifted the day before. Interestingly the yacht was still in okay condition, with the hull reported to be fully intact. You could actually refit it, and she will sail again. Something which I believe will never happen, considering the pain all this sinking brought, she will most probably be scrapped after the investigation is completed.
It will be now interesting what the outcome will be, and a decision of blame will come. The Maritime Accidents Investigation Report had provided an outcome of its own, saying that the stability book did not cover the yacht's vulnerabilities with certain weather, and if it was hit by 63 knots of wind or greater at right angle, with its center board closed the yacht could capsize and sink in a short time once it goes beyond an angle of seventy degrees.
The Bayesian went down first and foremost for a few things all coming together and make the perfect storm for it to sink and create this tragedy. The crew not anticipating such a strong storm, the stability book not showing the yachts vulnerabilities, with this putting both Perini Navi and Ron Holland in the cross fire of the investigation, but also the class and the flag of the yacht. Yacht Builders and designers do comply with the regulations given in reality. In hind sight the regulation side should have asked for more, considering the record size of the mast, and the difference of the project versus the other 56 meters sister ships.
Probably the primary lesson from this, is that much more with extreme projects, being it a super yacht, cruise liner, or a commercial ship, the regulatory side has to think beyond. Navigation institutes had a lesson in this with the most famous wreckage of them all, the m/v Titanic which took about 1500 lives as it went down in the Atlantic Ocean after striking an iceberg during navigation in 12 April 1912. While we learned a lot of lessons from that tragedy of more then a century ago, it is interesting how we keep on coming back to the next fail of sea safety.


































