Marooned in the MaldivesThe
Hilfskreuzer SMS
Wolf has been at sea for nearly a year now. With aid from her Friedrichshafen FF.33e seaplane
Wolfschen (which headlined here last March:
https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=13750.msg263796#msg263796), the Q-ship is on track to sink fourteen ships totalling 38,391 gross register tonnage. The 450 mines aboard this notorious commerce raider will sink another thirteen ships, grossing a further 75,888 GRT. Sixteen of these victims are sailing under the British flag.
Naturally the havoc caused by this single ship is of great strategic concern to the British Admiralty. So the seaplane-carrier HMS
Raven II has been dispatched to the Indian Ocean to hunt down the Wolf. Ironically both vessels are wartime conversions of German merchant freighters. For this mission
Raven II has brought a Sopwith Baby and two Short Admiralty Type 184s. And this brings us to today's news that highlights a series of adventures experienced by the two-man crew of one of the Shorts, which inspired Rudyard Kipling's story
A Flight of Fact.
"
On a late afternoon on 21st April 1917, two pilots, 29-year-old Captain Abbott Mead, and 22-year-old co-pilot Smith were on a search mission from Male to Ari Atoll. The crew ran into a storm and were driven off course and lost all radio contacts with the naval ship. Eventually, they were forced to land near one of the remote islands as darkness approached. The seaplane was stuck at first due to low tide but managed to move around once the tide began to rise. They taxied around in search of a channel with no luck and eventually decided to taxi at high speed over the reef and into the calm waters inside the lagoon.
'There was nothing but the lightning to help us beach the machine beneath a bank of white coral sand crowned with coconut trees, which grew right down to the water's edge. We roped her to one of them. Then as the storm increased in violence, we spend a miserable night lying along the lower plane in an attempt to get some little shelter from the driving rain' - Captain Mead"
There was no food or water available on the island. The following morning with the rising sun the crew departed again in search of the mainland running very low on fuel. Eventually, they ran out of fuel and landed near the Filitheyo island. The wind and tides then pushed the seaplane to a reef nearby. Exhausted from trying to keep the seaplane off the reef and with night approaching, the two pilots decided to swim towards the island in hopes of receiving assistance... They reached the island after a mile and a half long swim. Once ashore they managed to find three huts with coconuts inside and drifted off to sleep. Late in the night, they were awakened by sound of locals" (via aviatorsmaldives.com)
What happened to the Short seaplane? How did the crew manage to meet the Sultan? Did the Raven and the Wolf ever duel?
Read the full account here:
https://www.aviatorsmaldives.com/post/the-story-of-how-a-british-seaplane-was-stranded-on-a-remote-island-in-faafu-atoll-in-1917. And more here:
https://www.kipling.org.uk/rg_flightfact1_p.htm(from the Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, 30 December 1917):

(image via aviatorsmaldives.com)
Hare's a look back at forum member IanB's build of a Short 184 in 1/72 scale by Aeroclub:
https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=5132.0