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Vanlene
Travels Without Navigation Equipment Across Pacific, Wrecks on
Vancouver Island
Captain Lo Speaks of the Wreck:
Captain Lo Chung Hung of the freighter Vanlene has spoken freely
since the grounding of his ship March 14, 1972 on Austin Island in
Barkley Sound. Lo claims that “all our navigation aids had broken
down” and that “I requested of the ship’s owner that it be fixed
before we left Japan, but this was the option of the owner.”
Registered in Panama, the 8354-ton vessel was shipping cargo from
Japan to North America with a crew of 38.

“I am very unhappy.” -Lo: “I am very unhappy about it all,” continued Lo. It seems that the
young captain, at 29 years of age, had made his way from Nagoya by
heading due east for California with only two magnetic compasses, a
gyro compass and four repeaters. A preliminary enquiry into the
wreck found that the radar, radio direction finder, deep sea leader,
taffrail log and mechanical log were not in working order.
Is the Captain to Blame?
Was Lo a Master Captain of great skill and merit for guiding the
Vanlene so far with so little guidance, or a shamed man for running
aground? Is the captain ultimately to blame for shipwrecks,
regardless of the cause? Shipwreck Times meteorological sources say
a thick fog reduced vision along Vancouver Island’s west coast at
the time the Vanlene neared Barkley Sound. If a deceptive spring fog
had not contributed to the navigational confusion, would the Vanlene
have gone down, or made safe passage to its port of call?
But land seemed to sneak up
on the Vanlene’s lookout. Breakers were sighted on the starboard
side! Breakers to port! They had run out of sea room, and the vessel
ground to a halt on the rocks, so gently that the chief engineer did
not realise they had wrecked until the engines were shut down.
Captain Thought They Were Stranded in Washington
State: Half an hour passed before Lo put out the SOS call. He believed
their position to be somewhere on the Washington State coast. “The
ship’s position was precarious, listing heavily to starboard with
the
bow on the rocks and the
stern awash. The sea was choppy and a storm was blowing up” Lo
told journalists. When rescuers finally determined the true location
of the wreck, the Vancouver
tugboat Neva Straits arrived at the scene, heaving a line to the
distressed freighter to evacuate the crew. The Bamfield lifeboat
also played a role in the rescue.
Lo explained that the engine
room quickly flooded, making the pumping equipment unavailable.
“There is nothing you can do when the engine room of a ship floods.
Nothing but abandon the ship. I had to give this order for the
safety of my crew.”
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