Prøve GULL - Gratis
Lost at sea
Practical Boat Owner
|August 2023
Cruising pioneer Peter Tangvald's son, Thomas, disappeared after sailing from South America in 2014. Kathy Catton recalls her memories of him
-

Thomas Thor Tangvald was born at sea on his father's boat, L'Artemis de Pytheas. It was 1976, by which time Thomas's father Peter Tangvald was already a seasoned, competent sailor, having completed a five-year round-the-world voyage on an earlier boat, Dorothea, a 32ft cutter, with no motor, electricity or transmitter.
For Thomas, his life on the ocean, and less so on land, was a dichotomy of restrictions and freedoms. Sometimes gruelling, sometimes exhilarating and often brutal. By the age of 15, Thomas had witnessed the deaths of his mother, his stepmother and his father and half-sister.
My path collided with Thomas's when we arrived at Leeds University in September 1994. Both aged 18, we seemingly had much in common. We had a love of languages, a love of sailing, and we both had the desire to find freedom. But that was where the similarities ended.
Harrowing loss
When Thomas first told me about the shipwreck that killed his father and half-sister on the coast of Bonaire, in the Dutch West Indies, he seemed very casual about it. It was early in our relationship, and I couldn't understand how he could recount something so heart-breaking in such a straightforward manner; he almost appeared hardened to the trauma. But he was not without vulnerability. As he wrote in the epilogue of his father's posthumous autobiography, At Any Cost:
"... Then I saw the broad white line, the boiling foam of relentless, charging waves crashing onto the shore. In seconds L'Artemis was on it, the bow plunging down and the stern rising with such violence as to knock all the wind out of the main. 'Non! Non!' I screamed as if it was going to make any difference..." Thomas described to me how he rushed to grab his surfboard as L'Artemis de Pytheas's bow slammed into the coral rock. In complete darkness (there was no moon that night), Thomas struggled to untie the knot securing his surfboard.
Denne historien er fra August 2023-utgaven av Practical Boat Owner.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Practical Boat Owner

Practical Boat Owner
Keep your boat dry this winter
Ashore or afloat, winter cold and damp can have a detrimental effect. Jake Kavanagh looks at options for keeping condensation and moisture at bay
9 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
First time above the Arctic Circle
JoJo Pickering is wowed by mountains, deep anchorages, fjords and endless daylight while sailing a 48ft yacht on Norway's west coast
7 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Legendary boats
Saša Fegić shares his pick of the boats that shaped sailing history and transformed the sport
13 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Diesel engine fluids
The key to a smooth-running diesel engine is making sure you look the fluids, as John Panye explains
10 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Dismasted off the Lizard
Richard Ayres makes his first Mayday call when his yacht is dismasted and prop fouled close to the Manacle rocks
6 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Safer boarding quidance for small craft
Skippers and crew of small boats are being advised to consider boarding aids such as additional ladders, handholds, and alternative means of access, such as a tender.
1 min
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
The new old navigation
You can do it with your eyes shut
3 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Ex-lifeboatman's nine year solo voyage
A former Plymouth lifeboat volunteer has returned from his 30,000-mile circumnavigation on his 36ft yacht, nine years after setting off.
1 min
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Island of dreams
Modern intrusions vie with the trill of oystercatchers close to Dave's dream home
3 mins
November 2025

Practical Boat Owner
Ella's Arctic record attempt on pause
Ella Hibbert, who is the first British woman to sail the Northwest Passage single-handed, has halted her solo sail around the Arctic due to safety concerns ahead of attempting the Northeast Passage behind schedule, but vowed to continue again next summer.
1 min
November 2025
Translate
Change font size