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Pirates Invade Topsail

A pirate galleon roams the Intracoastal Waterway near Surf City and Topsail Beach preying on the Belle of Topsail and her passengers. (photos by Connie Pletl)

TOPSAIL VOICE

By Connie Pletl
Published: Wednesday, March 23, 2011 3:05 PM EDT
SURF CITY – Legend has it that in olden days pirates would lurk in the waters behind Topsail Island waiting to ambush passing merchant ships.

The pirates are back!

The pirates of today can be found chasing down and warring with the Belle of Topsail, an 1800s replica riverboat that provides cruises for passengers in the Intercoastal Waterway.

On Thursday, March 17, Captain David Luther and his wife, Admiral Sharon, took out the Belle for this year’s inaugural pirate cruise with a boat full of guests.

It was a warm and sunny that late afternoon and the sun sparkled on the water as the Belle made her way from Surf City south toward Topsail Beach.

The Belle had barely passed the Soundside Park when Capt. David announced that a pirate ship had been spotted and was gaining on the Belle!

Before too long a pirate galleon pulled up beside the Belle and shot black powder cannons at the boat.

Yelling threats and brandishing weapons, the pirates boarded the Belle when their captain brought his ship up next to the boat.

But this pirate invasion wasn’t typical, the pirates had a goal in mind.

“Ashley! Where’s Ashley?” bellowed one of the pirates before finding the woman he was looking for.

Ashley Shaffer, who was on spring break from Fairmont College in West Virginia visiting her boyfriend, was one of the passengers on the boat. 

The pirates grabbed her and pulled her roughly to the side of the upper deck.

It was then that she realized that her boyfriend, Brandon Hipp, a US Marine originally from Appleton, WI  but stationed at Camp Lejeune, was one of the pirates.

In pirate garb and on bended knee, Hipp asked Shaffer to marry him.

She said yes.

Later, the couple explained how the event had taken place.

After boarding the boat, Hipp told Shaffer that he needed to use the bathroom but when he left her on the top deck of the Belle he ran down the dock and got on the pirate ship instead.

“After I had been gone a while I used my cell phone to text her to say I was still at the bathroom,” said Hipp.

Hipp’s friend Travis Mather, a fellow Marine originally from Orlando, FL  but also stationed at Camp Lejeune, was also aboard the Belle and videoed the whole event.

Capt. David said Hipp had contacted him about three weeks before the cruise and told him that he wanted to propose to his girlfriend on the boat.

Not one to let an opportunity pass, Capt. David arranged for the proposal to be memorable.

“It’s something that they will be telling their grandchildren about,” said Capt. David.

After the proposal, the Belle continued down the waterway and was harried by the pirates several more times.

The passengers on the Belle said they enjoyed the cruise and the pirates.

Adam Johnson, from Arizona, and his girlfriend Becka Bullard, from Oklahoma, were in the area visiting family when they decided to take a cruise on the Belle.

“It’s really nice, we love it,” said Bullard.

Johnson added that he thought the cruise would be fun for kids.

Another couple, David Buckhout, from Rochester, NY, and Caroline Cota, from Ohio, had just gotten engaged earlier in the week and said they had a great time on the cruise.

“It’s nice to see everything by boat,” said Cota.

Capt. David said much went into creating the pirate cruise.

For three years, the pirate re-enactor group Devil Men of Cape Fear, led by Capt. De’vil (William Hall), had been after him to do a pirate re-enactment.

“Last year I finally decided to give it a try,” said Capt. David.

The original pirate ship was a small chad boat, the takeover was scripted and the pirate troupe insisted on being authentic.

“We had a blast! It was off the wall fun,” said Capt. David.

The first pirate cruise had only booked at about 60-percent but the word quickly spread about the event.

“All the other shows were completely sold out,” said Captain David.

Looking to improve the experience, Capt. David said that when Hall told him that he knew of a skipjack boat for sale that could be turned into a pirate galleon, he jumped at the chance.

“It was an oyster boat up at the Chesapeake Bay,” said Capt. David.

Work began on it over the winter and by spring it had been reconstructed into a masted pirate’s galleon complete with cannons. 

For this year’s season, Capt. David said there will be four pirate cruises a day – a more benign cruise for smaller kids; two wide open cruises complete with hands-on water cannon fights with the pirates and a trip to an island to find treasure; and an adult cruise with lot of ruckus.

“We have a lot of excitement and a lot of fun planned,” said Capt. David.

“There will also be a dinner cruise but I can’t guarantee that it will be pirate free,” he added.

For more information about The Belle of Topsail and pirate cruises, go to belleoftopsail.com.



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