Cargo Ship Saves 29-Year-Old Sailor In South Pacific After Her Boat Flips

Enlarge this image toggle caption JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER/AFP/Getty Images JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER/AFP/Getty Images

The challenge: Sail 30,000 miles around the globe, non-stop, alone.

What could go wrong?

This week, Susie Goodall found out. The 29-year-old British woman was the youngest participant in the Golden Globe Race which sends sailors from the coast of France around the earth and back to the same port. Or at least that's the plan.

On Wednesday morning, Goodall was 2,000 miles west of South America when her boat flipped in heavy wind, broke its mast and knocked her temporarily unconscious. She activated her emergency beacon and a series of troubling updates were posted to her Twitter account:

Chile's Maritime Coordination Center received her distress signal and ordered the Tian Fu, a cargo ship on its way from China to Argentina, to divert from its course and rescue Goodall.

Meanwhile, all Goodall could do was wait — trying to keep her boat steady in the choppy South Pacific and pumping out water that was leaking into the damaged cabin.

When the 600-foot rescue vessel finally reached Goodall, deploying a small boat to retrieve her was deemed impossible because of 10-13 foot waves rocking both ships. Instead, crew members on board the Tian Fu executed a kind of high-stakes version of Candy Crane, lowered a cable from one of the ship's massive cargo hoists, and plucked Goodall from her deck, hauling her to safety.

The good news was posted to her Facebook page: "From Susie, at 15:14 UTC: ON THE SHIP!!!" Goodall is expected to arrive at the Chilean port of Punta Arenas on Wednesday.

She is not the first sailor to run into trouble in the race. As NPR reported, an accident in the Indian Ocean in September forced the evacuation of a naval commander; skippers from France and Ireland have also had to be rescued.

In a post from Nov. 30 titled "Half way round the world," Goodall wrote about how challenging the experience had been at that point as she faced fierce seas.

"To say I'd had enough by this point is an understatement. They were the hardest and loneliest days I've ever had. All I wanted was a break from it. But being under Australia, half the world from home I might as well sail home again instead of taking a break."

Her family thanked rescuers and race organizers Friday, and said farewell to her ship, the DHL Starlight.