People who went to sea and got stuck for a really long time


 

Adrift

Jose Salvador Alvarenga is a Salvadorian fisherman who spent 483 days at sea. Alvarenga set off from Mexico on 17 November 2012, with a fellow fisherman, Ezequiel Córdoba. They intended to spend 30 hours deep-sea fishing, but their boat was blown off course and damaged during a storm that lasted five days. With no sails or oars, and with a dead battery, the fishermen drifted towards open waters. They managed to catch fish, turtles, jellyfish and seabirds, and drank rainwater, as well as their own urine and turtle blood, in order to survive. However, around four months into the journey, Córdoba became sick from eating raw food, and eventually starved to death when he then refused to eat. Alvarenga continued to drift at sea for several more months, until he reached the Marshall Islands on 30 January 2014, following a journey of around 6,000 miles.

Underwater

Harrison Okene was on board the tug-boat AHT Jascon-4, when it capsized off the coast of Nigeria on 26 May 2013. Okene, the crew’s cook, was in the toilet when he realised the boat was sinking, but luckily managed to find his way to an air pocket as the boat sank over 100 feet below the surface. He then remained in the airpocket, in total darkness, for over 60 hours. During his ordeal, Orkene had nothing to eat or drink, and the salt water actually took the skin off his tongue. He was also able to smell the bodies of his dead crew mates, and later could hear the fish eating them. Eventually, Orkene was rescued by divers who had come to collect the bodies; he attracted their attention by grabbing one of them, which understandably gave the diver quite a fright. Orkene then had to spend time in a decompression chamber before being brought to the surface, otherwise he would have likely experienced cardiac arrest or neurological issues. Orkene describes his ordeal as a “miracle”, but understandably still suffers from related nightmares.

Marooned

In June 1965, a group of six boys, aged 13-16, who boarded together at a strict Catholic school, decided to escape by stealing a boat from a local fisherman and attempting to travel to Fiji. The boys took some coconuts, a few sacks of bananas and a gas burner with them and set sail. Unfortunately, the boat’s sail ripped that same night, and the boys drifted at sea for eight days before they reached the rocky island of ‘Ata, where they lived for the next 15 months. The boys arranged a rota for garden, kitchen, and guard duty, and worked in teams of two. By the time they were rescued by an Australian sea captain who noticed the smoke from their fire, the boys had created a food garden, had hollowed out tree trunks to collect water, and had made a gym and badminton court. But the boys’ ordeal didn’t end when they were rescued; upon their return to Tonga, they were arrested for stealing the boat. Luckily the Australian captain who rescued them before was able to rescue them again, this time by paying for the old boat and negotiating their release on the condition that they would star in a Holywood remake of their adventure.

Comments

  1. The underwater one is definitely the worst, even though the shortest!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Makes you realise how very, very big the sea is!

    ReplyDelete

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