Tony Bullimore (15 January 1939 – 31 July 2018)[1] was a British businessman and international yachtsman. He is known especially for being rescued on 10 January 1997 after he had been presumed dead in a sailing race.[1]
Bullimore moved to Bristol in the early 1960s and married Lalel, a West Indian immigrant. In 1966 they opened the Afro-Caribbean-inspired Bamboo Club, which was billed as "Bristol's Premier West Indian Entertainment Centre", housed a restaurant, theatre workshop, football team and was the headquarters of the Bristol West Indian Cricket Club. The top floor housed the music venue, with DJs playing reggae and American soul music, and bands performed including Bob Marley and The Wailers, Jimmy Cliff, Ben E. King and Tina Turner.[1][3] The club burned down in 1977,[1] just before the Sex Pistols were due to play there.[3][4] Bullimore had already opened The Granary club at Bristol's Granary building in the early 1970s, which after ten years he slowly sold off to concentrate on other business ventures. He also became a race relations advocate in Bristol.[3][4]
On 5 January 1997, in the Southern Ocean near 52°S100°E / 52°S 100°E / -52; 100 (Tony Bullimore distress), around 2,500 kilometres (1,300 nmi) off the Australian coast and in winds of up to 160 kilometres per hour (100 mph; 90 kn),[5] Bullimore's boat, Exide Challenger, capsized; the majority of press and media reports assumed that the 57-year-old sailor was lost. Bullimore was alive and managed to survive in an air pocket in the upside-down boat in pitch darkness, having lost his food supplies, aside from a bar of chocolate. The Royal Australian Navy launched a rescue mission for Bullimore and another Vendée Globe capsized competitor, Thierry Dubois. On 9 January, Dubois was rescued by an Australian S-70B-2 Seahawk helicopter embarked on the frigate HMAS Adelaide.[6][7]
Adelaide then proceeded further south to where the Exide Challenger had been located by a RAAFP-3 Orion. Adelaide dispatched a rigid-hulled inflatable boat to the Exide Challenger where crew members knocked on the hull. Hearing the noise, Bullimore swam out from his boat and was quickly rescued by personnel from Adelaide.[8] HMAS Adelaide then returned both Dubois and Bullimore to Perth.[9] During the return journey, Bullimore met with each member of the boat's crew to thank them for saving his life.
In 2000 he was featured in a BBC documentary about crossing the Atlantic Ocean, with the comedian Lenny Henry.[1]
Bullimore skippered a team that came second in the 2005 Oryx Quest. In 2007, he was involved in another sailing record attempt.[10]
^Roberson, John (April 1997). "Capsizes and Rescues". Sailing World. Cruising World Publications. Archived from the original on 9 May 2006. Retrieved 31 July 2018.