Art and Sea in Provence

Art and Sea in Provence is love of an artist for her trade, her atelier hidden deep in the Massif des Maures range overlooking the Golfe of Saint Tropez, and the love of a sailor for the sea and his boat soon on its way back home to Port Cogolin from the last crossing to Florida.

seanseamour's shared items

Transfer of our blog activity

We have come to neglect updating this blog site as most of our activity had been on the Art and Sea in Provence sister site you can find at http://artseaprovence.blogharbor.com/blog
please come and visit us or Mayke' art site at www.maykesassen.com







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United States Coast Guard - One Million Rescues!

Digg a hero in celebration of the USCG's 1,000,000th rescue!My crew and I are but three of the million saved, our heroic rescue of s/v Sean Seamour II occurred this past May 7th during sub-tropical storm Andrea, the log of the event is at http://artseaprovence.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2007/6/27/3049534.html the action report which speaks f itself and is a must read can be found on Robin Storms' blog http://robinstorm.blogspot.com/2007/07/summary-of-action-for-cg6014-for-sv.html.

read more | digg story

Mayke Sassen - some of my older artwork

Mayke Sassen - some of my older artwork
This is an image of our Camp de la Suyère, our retreat deep in the Maures mountain
range overlooking the Gulf of Saint Tropez. It is just far enough to avoid the summer hustle
and bustle while close enough to meet Jean Pierre' passion: to be on the water within minutes.
After our terrible loss of Sean Seamour II last May and our subsequent landlocked state he has
begun to plan Sean Seamour III

In the meantime I have delved into my new atelier finding new sources of inspiration you
can find in the gallery window of my website http://www.maykesassenthornton.com/galerie.php
I will soon post pictures of the atelier itself.


As not all my work is presented on the website, at the request of those interested I have
begun to post some of my older artwork on the blog as these are generally not presented
on my website, just click
http://artseaprovence.blogharbor.com/blog/Someofmyolderpaintings
to see them, notably some commissions and items in private collections.
Unfortunately some are from scanned photographic material. There is of course much
more of my work available on my website www.maykesassen.com .

I would love your feedback on what you think of these paintings and of course
what I am doing now.

The painting below that was to become Camp de la Suyère was made three
years ago, well before we had discovered our little hidden hamlet full
of history. The palm tree isn't that big but our home it is effectively composed
of three buildings of which one is separated and has become my atelier.




Camp de la Suyère
Oil on Canvas 80cm X 80cm















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s/v Sean Seamour II - the final log entry

Mayke Sassen' website extension

"Atelier and Current Work"

is up and running at last,it can be seen at:

http://www.maykesassen.com/galerie.php


I am presenting a preview of some of my new work:


Chorus
, an 100 X 110cm oil on canvas



About me:


Background of Mayke (little Mary in Dutch) Sassen

Mayke Sassen is a Dutch citizen living in Provence, deep in the Massif des Maures mountain range overlooking the Gulf of Saint Tropez. Born and educated in Holland I studied the Beaux Arts and Theater, becoming a drama teacher for several years before dedicating myself exclusively to visual arts.

Visiting my website www.maykesassen.com one can discover the very eclectic nature of my work drawing upon the various areas of the world in which I have lived and expressed my art.

Although I have the most often shunned the public eye, preferring to work on commissions and through a network of collectors who over years and continents have absorbed most of my work, I have engaged in successful exhibitions in Holland, Japan and Nigeria. For the past ten years I have had a “living gallery” with my husband, a “Hotel de Charme” in the Luberon region of Provence. The flow and appreciation of the Auberge' guests and the insatiable appetite of some for my work has reconciled my timidity from the public eye. Visit the inn's website I designed and the artwork of and in the rooms, it's another dimension to my portfolio www.auberge-presbytere.com

Beyond the private collections for the most part in Europe, I have works in many corners of the world to include ImperialCollege in London, the University of Louvain Belgium, Shell headquarters in LagosNigeria and Shell Center London.

Until we recently moved back to la Garde Freinet overlooking the Golfe de Saint Tropez my Atelier was adjacent to the Auberge du Presbytere where a substantial part of my recent work can be seen on permanent exhibition. My new atelier and current work can be seen directly from my website

e-mail :mayke.jeanpierre@gmail.com or: artseaprovence@yahoo.com


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Art and Sea in Provence

Art and Sea in Provence is love of an artist for her trade, her atelier hidden deep in the Massif des Maures range overlooking the Golfe of Saint Tropez, and the love of a sailor for the sea and his boat soon on its way back home to Port Cogolin from the last crossing to Florida.

Our move back to Saint Tropez from the Luberon is over, albeit with the terrible loss of our Sean Seamour II in sub-tropical storm Andrea. From 4000 miles away I felt the storm brew then explode, Camp de la Suyere became my widow walk, canvas my only connection to nature' course.

The widow walk of Camp de la Suyere, waiting on Sean Seamour II

On Sunday the 6th of May I felt sick, I felt in the middle of a fog, I was tired, tired of the black painting with a lady dressed in white sitting on a red couch - she used to sit in a hotel room in Provence .

I painted that room out, it was the past.

How lost I felt, lost in a sea. I kept seeing our boat Sean Seamour II plowing through the waves - on and on and on. They were crossing the Atlantic and I was sitting here waiting.

From my window enormous trees were towering over the house, black and menacing, the ground rolling up an down. I painted the house facing the woman, trees and rolling ground in the background.

On the seventh I painted a white road through and past the house, disappearing in the distance, it looked like a gigantic wave.

That afternoon I learned that the boat had sunk, swallowed under a big white wave where (s)he now rests three miles on the bottom of the Ocean, O Sean. The crew was saved, they would all come home, the waiting was over.



Mayke & Jean Pierre de Lutz
Camp de la Suyère, 83680 La Garde Freinet, France
Web:
www.maykesassen.com
post tropical storm Andrea, the final log of s/v Sean Seamour II can be read at
http://artseaprovence.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2007/6/9/3011519.html



Atlantic crossing terminated by first tropical storm Andrea

The storm that was not to be, subsequently named Andrea, might have spared s/v Sean Seamour II, but a rogue wave estimated at over 80 feet was too much for the vessel on its way across the Atlantic. Our survival and the existence of this log of harrowing events is to be credited to the the extraordinary dedication of the US Coast Guard




s/v Sean Seamour II - the final log post after tropical storm Andrea


Cape Cod, May 12th 2007

This is the log of actions and events driven by the only subsequently named Sub-tropical Storm Andrea, leading to the sinking of s/v Sean Seamour II and the successful rescue of its entire crew on the early morning of May 7th 2007.

We departed from Green Cove Springs on the Saint Johns River in the early morning of May 2nd, 2007. Gibraltar was our prime destination with a planned stopover in the Azores for recommissioning and eventually fuel. The vessel, on its second crossing was fully prepared and some of the recent preparations done by Holland Marine and skipper with crew were as follows:

· Full rig check, navigation lights, new wind sensor, sheet and line check / replacement
· New autopilot, stuffing box and shaft seal, house battery bank, racor fuel filtering system
· Bottom paint, new rudder bearing and check, new auxiliary tiller, full engine maintenance
· Recertification of life raft and check of GPIRB (good to November 2007), update and
replacement of all security equipment (PFDs, flares, medical, etc).

Although paper charts were available for all planned destinations, with increased dependence on electronic navigational aids, two computers were programmed to handle both the MaxSea navigation software (version 12.5) as well as the Iridium satphone for weather data (MaxSea Chopper and OCENS). A full electronic systems checkout and burn trial was done during the days prior to departure.

For heavy weather and collision contingencies cutter rigged Sean Seamour II was equipped with two drogues (heavy and light), collision mat, auxiliary electric pump, as well as extensive power tools to enable repairs at sea with the 2.4kva inverter. Operational process and use of this equipment was discussed at length with the crew in anticipation. Other physical process contingencies such as lashing, closing seacocks, companionway doors, etc. were equally treated.

The 7 day weather GRIBs downloaded almost daily from April 25th onwards showed no inconsistencies, with the two high and two low pressure systems fairly balanced over the western Atlantic. Only the proximity of the two low pressure systems seemed to warrant surveillance as the May 5th GRIB would indicate with a flow increase from the N,NO from 20 to 35 knots focused towards coastal waters.

Already on a northerly course some 200 nautical miles out, I maintained our navigational plan with a N,NE heading until increased winds warranted a more easterly tack planned approximately 300 nautical miles north of Bermuda towards the Azores.

Wind force increased about eight hours earlier than expected and later shifted to the NE reaching well into the 60 knots range by early afternoon, then well beyond as the winds shifted. Considering that we were confronted with a sustained weather system that was quite different from the gulf stream squall lines we had weathered previous days, by mid afternoon I decided to take appropriate protective measures.

From our last known position approximately 217 nautical miles east of Cape Hatteras I reversed course, laying my largest drogue off the starboard stern while maintaining a quarter of the storm jib on the inner roller furl. This was designed to balance the boat's natural windage due in large part to its hard dodger and center cockpit structure.

By late afternoon the winds were sustained at well over 70 knots and seas were building fast. I estimate seas were well into 25 feet by dusk but after adding approximately 150 feet of drogue line the vessel handled smoothly over the next eight hours advancing with the seas at about 6 knots (SOG). By late evening the winds were sustained above 74 kts and a crew member recorded a peak of 85.5 kts.

Growing and irregular seas were the primary concern as in the very early hours of the morning the boat was increasingly struck by intermittant waves to its port side. Crew had to be positioned against the starboard side as both were tossed violently across the boat. Water began to accumulate seemingly fed through the stern engine-room air cowls. I believe in retrospect the goosenecks were insufficient with the pitch of larger waves as they were breaking onto the stern.

At approximately 02.45 hours we were violently knocked all the way down to starboard. It appears that the resulting angle and tension may have caused the drogue line to rupture (clean cut), perhaps as it rubbed against the same engine-room air-intake cowl positioned just below the cleat. The line was attached to the port side main winch then fed through the cleat where it was covered with anti-chaffing tape and lubricant. Before abandoning ship I noticed the protected part of the line was intact and extended beyond the cleat some five inches. Its position in the cleat rather than retracted from it also supports this theory.

After the knockdown I knew there was already structural damage and that we had lost control of the vessel. I pulled the GPIRB (registered to USCG documented Sean Seamour II) but I suspect that the old EPIRB from 1996 (Registered to USCG documented Lou Pantai, but kept as the vessel was sold to an Italian national in 1998) might have been automatically launched first. I kept this unit as a redundancy latched in its housing on the port side of the hard dodger; it may have been ejected upon the first knockdown as Coast Guard Authorities questioned relatives with this vessel name versus Sean Seamour II. Herein lies a question that needs to be answered, hopefully it will be in light of the USCG report.

The GPIRB initially functioned but the strobe stopped and the intensity of the light diminished rapidly to the extent that I do not know if the Coast Guard received that signal. At the time were worried the unit was not emitting and I reinitiated the unit twice. The unit sent for recertification with the life raft a few weeks prior had been returned from River Services. They had responded to Holland Marine that the unit was good until this coming November, functioned appropriately, and that the battery had an extra five year life expectancy. I will await reception of the Coast Guard report to find out if one or both signals was processed as all POCs were questioned regarding Lou Pantai and not my current vessel Sean Seamour II (both vessels had been / in the case of Sean Seamour II is US Coast Guard documented).

Expecting worse to come I re-lashed and locked all openings and the companionway. At 02:53hours we were struck violently again and began a roll to 180 degrees. As the vessel appeared to stabilize in this position I unlocked the companionway roof to exit an see where the life raft was. It had disappeared from its poop deck cradle which I could directly access as the helm and pedestal had been torn away. When I emerged to the surface against the boat's starboard (in righted port position) it began its second 180 degree roll. As it emerged the rig was almost longitudinal to the boat barely missing the stern arch. Spreaders were arrayed over cockpit and port side, mast cleanly bent at deck level, forestays apparently torn away.

I ordered the crew to start all pumps. By their own volition they also cut out 2.5 gallon water bottles to enable physical bailing while I continued to locate the liferaft. It finally appeared upside down under the rig. As its sea anchors and canopy lines were entangled in the rig and partially torn by one of the spreaders I decided to cut them away in an effort to save time and effort. I needed the crew below and had to manage the rig entanglement alone. This done I managed to move the unit forward and use its windward position to blow it over the bow to starboard, attaching it still upside down.

As all communications excepting hand held VHF were down (SSB antennae on backstay, DSC VHF down and backup antennae inaccessible, Iridium soaked in roll, GPIRB not functioning, EPIRB seemingly lost to sea when hard dodger sheared) too much time was dedicated to hailing over the hand held VHFs and attempting to re-initialise the GPRIB). Had I cut the rig, dumped the 150 yards of chain in the bow, plugged the deck through mast passage and rerouted the rule pumps through the deck air cowl vents, we could have jump started the engine, deployed a second drogue with the sixty yards of stern anchor chain and regained control of the vessel. But that critical time window was lost.

Below, water was being stabilized above the knees. The new higher positioned house battery bank was not shorted by the water level but the engine bank was flooded not enabling us to start the engine and pump from the bilge instead of the seacock. In retrospect this was not a loss as having to keep one of the companionway doors off for bailing and to route the Rule pump pipe, the water pouring in from here and the through-deck mast hole were no match for the impeller' volume. Plugging the mast passage was also not a solution as it was moving and hitting violently against the starboard head wall and was dangerous to try to cope with.

I knew the situation was desperate but it was still safer to stay aboard than to abandon ship, let alone in the dark any earlier than necessary. Estimating daylight at about 05:30 hours, we needed to hold on for at least another two hours. As the boat shifted in the waves it became increasingly vulnerable to flooding from breaking waves. One such wave at about 05:20 added about 18 inches of water, as the bow was now barely emerged these two factors triggered my decision to abandon ship. I exited first knowing that the raft was still upside down. In addition, some of the canopy lines still needed to be cut from the rig entanglement. In the precipitation the grab bag containing Iridium phone, VHF, GPS and all our personal and ship documents was lost.


As we boarded the now upturned raft it immediately flooded with the breaking waves and once unprotected from the wind by the hull structure was prone to turn over (no sea anchors nor canopy to roll over on). Hypothermia was already gaining upon one of my crew and myself and our efforts to right and re-enter the raft drained strength. Periods spent lying on the overturned raft exposed to the wind seemed to further weaken us.
Sean Seamour II sank a few minutes after we abandoned ship fully disappearing from view after the second wave crest.

We became aware of fixed wing overflight sometime between 06:00 and 07:00 hours and estimate that the Coast Guard helicopter arrived some time around 08:30 hours. As seemingly the most affected by hypothermia and almost unconscious the crew had me lifted out first. It was a perilous process during which Coast Guard AST2 Dazzo was himself injured (later to be hospitalized with us). The liferaft was destroyed and abandoned by AST2 Dazzo as the third crew member was extracted. He also recouped the GPIRB which remained in USCG custody.


The emotions and admiration felt by my crew and myself to the dedication of this Coast Guard team is immeasurable, all the more so when hearing them comment on the severity and risk of the extraction, perhaps the worst they had seen in ten years (dixit SAT2 Dazzo). They claim to have measured 50 plus foot waves which from our perspective were mountains. We measured after the first knockdown and before loosing our rig winds still in excess of 72 knots.
Also to be commended are the medical teams involved, from our ambulatory transfer of custody from the rescue team to the personnel awaiting us at Cherry Point Naval Hospital. There the personnel under Director for Administration CDR Robert S. Fry sought not only to address our physical and medical trauma, but preempted the humanitarian crisis we were facing after all this loss and anguish by bringing in the disaster relief assistance of the American Red Cross to whom we owe the clothes, shelter and food that helped us survive this ordeal.


CREW SAVED IN US COAST GUARD HELICOPTER




Post scriptums :
The EPIRB issue
The Coast Guard Team
Our custodial process, homeland security
The reconstitution of events for Flying Colors
Hapag Lloyds Paris Express
Rogue wave research and incoming data
The what if issue



About Sean Seamour

Builder: Beneteau' Wauquiez shipyard
Designer: Farr Yacht Design, Ltd
LOA: 44'7"
LWL: 40'
Beam: 14'
Draft: 5'11"
Ballast: 6,835 lbs
Displacement: 23,369 lbs


Mayke et Jean Pierre de Lutz
Camp de la Suyère, 83680 La Garde Freinet, Fance

e-mail: mayke.jeanpierre@gmail.com

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