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Chicagoan's empty boat discovered
November 17, 2001
by GARY WISBY staff reporter
The empty rowboat of Nenad
Belic, missing in the North Atlantic since Sept. 30, was found Friday
near Shannon, Ireland.
Discovery of the upside-down
craft was the final blow to the hopes of his family.
When searchers on Oct. 1
found a floating beacon activated by Belic, "our hearts sank,"
said Jenifer Clark, a Maryland oceanographer who had been talking with
him twice a week.
"But there was no
debris, so we thought maybe he was still out there but couldn't
communicate with anyone. It gave us false hope."
The Irish and English coast
guards combed 1,000 square miles of sea for about a week. Then the
search was taken up for several days by private planes hired by the
family of the retired Chicago cardiologist. Irish and Spanish fishing
boats also continued the search.
"We had told him he
needed to have the beacon attached to his body," Clark said.
"I told him it was likely he would be capsized."
Belic, 63, had never
experienced higher waves than those on the Great Lakes. "I don't
think he took it seriously," Clark said.
His enclosed boat was
painted yellow, but had a gray bottom. "It was pretty close to the
color of the sea," said Jerome Stone, Belic's father-in-law. Had
the bottom been yellow too, the boat might have been found sooner, he
said.
Rough weather shortly after
he took off on May 11 from Massachusetts held Belic up for a month.
Otherwise he would have reached land long before the storm season
arrived.
Having crossed 2,500 miles
of sea, the oarsman was only 230 miles from land. "He was so
close," Clark said. "In [the movie] 'The Perfect Storm' they
thought it was worth the risk. I think he did too."
Belic sounded happy every
time she spoke with him. "He brought some books on tapes, but
hadn't listened to a single one of them," Clark said. "He told
me he was thinking and whistling."
Stone said: "He was the
only person I know of who could be in a rowboat at sea for over four
months and enjoy every day. He would describe this feeling of freedom
and euphoria, the thrill of being alone on the sea. He was in
rapture."
In addition to his wife,
Ellen Stone Belic, survivors include two daughters, Dara and Maia; two
sons, Roko and Adrian, and a brother, Padraig. |
Rowboat found
Saturday November 17 2001
An upturned small boat found floating seven miles off Kilkee, Co Clare, on
west coast of Ireland belonged to the American rower Nenad Belic, 62, who
left Cape Copd Massachusetts, six months ago on an attempted lone transatlantic voyage.
The boat was posted missing on September 30th.
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