Interesting,
@SouthAussie.
Indeed Capt. Borner reported he pulled his anchor and started his engines to gain control of his yacht / schooner and to avoid hitting the Bayesian. So his action supports this theory that that is a common first instinct.
However, I wondered ^^^ if the Baysian had two anchors deployed when the storm hit, after I watched the bizarre
Video of Satellite Data @Dotta posted of both sailing vessels during the storm.
In the video, as I described in a response post, at the start, Borner's yacht was facing into the wind (as you might expect with a single anchor). But at the same start time, the Bayesian was perpendicular to the wind, making me wonder if two anchors were initially holding her steady.
As the video time sequence elapses, Borner's yacht never changes its heading. However the Bayesian slightly sways back and forth for a while (like your article describes). But then suddenly it swings 180° with her stern then facing the wind.
From then, the Bayesian appears to be pushed from the stern by the wind for a while, and then she disappears. Borner says she went down stern first.
So it makes me wonder, if the Bayesian:
a) did have storm ready double anchors (bow and stern) deployed, but that
b) the force of the storm and physics caused the bow anchor to break causing (?) the sudden 180° turn with her stern now facing onto the wind, and
c) if there was a stern anchor left dragging while she was being pushed forward, could that have caused her to quickly take on water through the engine vents, eventually sinking her stern first?
Just some musings in response to your new information. I wonder how this author would evaluate that video?
All IMO!
ETA: video