MIAMI – More than five kilometres off the coast of Key Biscayne, a small island town near Miami, a 33-foot catamaran sails in the Atlantic. It’s Tuesday afternoon, and while his team of divers maintains a buoy organization, Captain Jim Hutslar plans to scatter the ashes of some recently deceased people in the water over Neptune Memorial Reef, a gigantic synthetic rock structure. resembling the lost city of Atlantis.
Beneath the glassy surface, 76 columns and a collection of marine life carved in stone cover several acres of ocean land at an intensity of 40 feet. The sculptures are made of a concrete addition and the cremated remains of other deceased people who chose Neptune as their final resting place, Hutslar told the Daily Beast.
Lately, these other people have inevitably included a wave of coronavirus patients in one of the worst hot spots in the U.S. pandemic.
“He’s been very busy,” said Hutslar, who helped build Neptune and works for the funeral company that owns it. “For the past six months, every month, more and more people have chosen to hold funerals at sea. I don’t have an accurate account, but we’re seeing record numbers.”
Although Hutslar stated that he did not know how many of those buried in the synthetic reef were similar to COVID-19, he thought it as a majority. “Recently, we’ve added a few hundred deaths a day, the maximum of which happen in South Florida,” he said of the state’s coVID-19 total. “Since Miami hit hard, our parent company has sent other people to help us with the workload.”
And with Florida coming out of its deadliest week of the pandemic, local funerals and funerals like Hutslar hope to serve as an option for overflowing morgues and transient corpse boxes that have a staple in the country’s hot spots. On July 31, the Florida Department of Health reported 257 deaths, breaking the state’s death record for the fourth day in a row. After two consecutive days of falls of less than a hundred deaths a day, the Sunshine State reported 245 deaths on Tuesday.
The old guard of traditional funeral homes in Magic City have been feeling it, too.
Patrick Range II, manager and general counsel for Miami-based Range Funeral Home, said last week he was nearing his capacity. “What we try to avoid is having families wait for long periods of time before having services and final dispositions of their loved ones,” Range said. “We try to encourage them to make a final decision so that we don’t have a backlog. Those limits are being tested.”
Donald Van Ordsel, president of Van Ordsel Funeral and Cremation Services, a funeral home chain based in Miami-Dade County’s unincorporated Kendall neighborhood, said the local system for processing death was in shambles. “Because there are so many COVID cases, it’s taking longer for doctors and the medical examiner to approve death certificates,” Van Ordsel said last month.
As funeral homes see their limits being tested, and as a never-ending season of pandemic death casts a shadow over the country, burials at sea are experiencing their own surge in demand. Dawn Mergelsberg, the Miami boat captain who owns a company called New Choice Burials, has been scattering ashes at sea for more than 13 years. In the past month, she’s done approximately 20 scatterings, she told The Daily Beast. “At least half of them were COVID deaths,” she said.
It’s a lonely goodbye for folks who use Mergelsberg’s services: She usually allows up to six relatives to accompany her to the scattering site, but because of the pandemic, no outsiders are currently permitted on her boat. “It’s to keep them, myself, and my first mate safe,” she said. “We will take photos and give them a certificate with the nautical coordinates of their loved one’s final journey. For some folks, they want to get closure as soon as possible.”
Brad White, a captain who helms New England Burials At Sea, which conducts ocean farewells nationwide, said his company was getting a flood of requests to hold ceremonies in the fall and winter months—with the hope the pandemic’s impact might have lessened by then.
“We’re seeing more begging proficiency programs from Panama City to Destiny and the starboard side of the Florida coast from Palm Beach to Cape Canaveral,” White told the Daily Beast. “We have about a dozen requests to bury the total plot at sea, yet we are delaying all those who have died of COVID until we hear from other funeral associations that it is. Meanwhile, New England Burials at Sea is Holding ceremonies, like other actors at the water funeral scene, focusing on scattering the ashes of COVID-19 victims, he said.
Unlike Mergelsberg, White stated that lately it allows up to 10 to 15 passengers on giant boats that allow a smart social distance. “It’s the length of any organization that attends a funeral at sea,” White said. “Many don’t need to jeopardize their circle of relatives, so they postpone what is a perfectly portable event.”
Hutslar, the ship’s captain and the dive instructor who runs Neptune Memorial Reef, said his employer, Service Corporation International, the largest funeral company in the United States, limits burials at sea to 8 people. “We had 20 to 30 families postponed because of the restrictions,” Hutslar said. “But we’re busy.”
The pandemic hit Hutslar close to home. His office manager caught coronavirus and had to quarantine for two weeks, he said. And a friend, a local funeral director in her forties, was recently felled by the disease, he said.
“She just died after spending 10 weeks in intensive care,” Hutslar told the Daily Beast. “Not even a fan of her.”
While the main points of his most recent arrangements were still in spite of all defined, Neptune will be his last resting place, Hutslar said.
“It is his desire to be a component of the reef.”
Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.