You know, what's a few thousand bucks at the end of the day?Ĭopyright 2022 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7. I mean, just preparation… I don't know had I known it was gonna be that intense, I would have stayed. Not this, but I mean, being on the water and having that, having that freedom.ĭo you have anything to share with people who may not have gone through that experience? Yeah, I mean, this is why we live in Florida. Is this affecting your want to be out on the water at all, or no?Ībsolutely not. It's something you see and you just can't take it in. But yeah, I mean, it's total devastation. Well, I'm partially blinded because my contacts got washed away, so I don't see everything very well. I mean, I was through all of the big ones, and this one was like nothing I've ever seen before.Īnd what was your impression when you saw a Fort Myers Beach and the San Carlos Island? And I've been through all of them since the ‘70s: David was a big one, Irma. So, this was nothing like any hurricane you've ever been through?Įver in my entire life, no. I have a house on the east coast, as well, but I've always had boats. I'm a yacht captain from the East Coast, so I've been on boats my entire life. I just moved the boat over, started the engine up and moved it over to the mooring field here. I had five anchors set and ended up with one left. We had boats crashing into us that broke loose, so that was the other problem. I guess the only way to put it is being put in a washing machine. What were, like, the sounds and the feelings that you were having? I mean … it was pretty much everybody holding on for their lives, even inside the boat. So, you guys got to know each other, I guess? I actually pulled three people out from the water that were washed off of their boats, so it was four of us all together on my tiny, little 27-foot boat. I've lived in Florida all my life, but it was eye-opening, to say the least. It was the second probably five hours that was the devastating part - that's when the big tidal surge was and everything, the backside of the storm and with the circulation going the other way.Įxplain the experience of staying on the boat. I lost track … but you know, the first part of the storm wasn't that bad. So, you were like working the whole storm? When you mentioned that staying on the boat, you were able to save it, what did you have to do to save it?Īdjusting lines and breaking other boats that were crashing into it because if they start getting tangled up, that's when the big problems are. It's down a little estuary on the north side. In a little hurricane hole - that's what they call it. Just wanting to save the boat that I just spent money on, and I was in a safe little spot. What went into your decision to stay out on the water during the hurricane? He had just located his totalled car, which was carried away by storm surge and ended up underneath the bridge that leads to Fort Myers Beach. WUSF's Jessica Meszaros spoke with "Captain Eric" on San Carlos Island four days after Ian’s landfall, about what it was like to be in middle of the storm. Eric Rakstis, a yacht captain from the East Coast, struggled for hours to save his new 27-foot Watkins sailboat that he had purchased just three days before the Category 4 storm hit. As Hurricane Ian pounded Southwest Florida a week and a half ago, some sailors were on the water, steering their boats and fighting for their lives.
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