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Man survives ocean plunge after seeking relief PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 05 March 2009 11:03

VICTORIA — A B.C. tugboat captain survived more than an hour in the icy ocean Tuesday after falling out of his boat while trying to urinate.

Kevin McGonigle thought he was a goner as he treaded water in the Pacific Ocean for 70 minutes clad in a T-shirt, sweater and pyjama bottoms.

The 49-year-old captain of the Regent had stepped outside to relieve himself and stumbled, falling overboard.

“I lost my balance and the next thing I knew, I was in the sea,” he said Wednesday.

The tug was on its way back to Campbell River from Vancouver, where it had delivered a log boom.

The other two crewmen didn’t realize McGonigle was gone until 25 minutes later. McGonigle was suddenly floating in 8 C water, hypothermia numbing his limbs.

It took a moment to realize what had happened.

“It felt terrible. Watching the boat disappear was the worst.”

McGonigle knew his chances of survival were slim. “I tried not to panic. I tried to tread water and passed out a couple of times.”

The tugboat crew called in a mayday at 1 p.m. local time, said Dennis Kimoto, marine controller at the Victoria Joint Rescue Communication Centre.

Local mariners joined the search, a coast guard vessel was dispatched from Port Hardy, and a Cormorant helicopter was sent out from Chilliwack.

McGonigle, who couldn’t raise his arms to wave because of the cold, figures he didn’t have much longer to live when the 86-foot trawler, Pacific Faith, located him after 20 minutes of searching.

He was close to unconscious, but McGonigle has the image of his rescue vessel etched in his memory: “I remember looking up at the that word, ‘Faith.’ I remember that vividly.”

He was taken to hospital, where he was reunited with his crew: “We just hugged. I feel sorry for them, actually. It was just a freak thing that happened. It’s nobody’s fault.”

The experience gave McGonigle plenty of time to contemplate how he had lived his life.

“There were things I wanted to change for sure,” he said, declining to elaborate.

Kimoto said McGonigle was in pretty good shape, considering the amount of time he was in the water.

“If he would have fallen overboard at night, it would have been a totally different story.”

 By Sandra McCulloch, Canwest News ServiceMarch 4, 2009

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 March 2009 11:10
 
Coast Guard Honors Tugboat Crew PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 15 October 2008 03:01
SEATTLE - The crew of the Tidewater Tug Invader was honored by the Coast Guard at the Tidewater Tug and Barge Lines office in Vancouver, Wash., Tuesday. The crew, including the tug’s master Jeff Baeker, pilot Joe Daley, deck mechanics Mike Tuthill and John Hill and Army Corps of Engineers Biologist Connie Grantwere were cited for their assistance with the rescue of the sternwheeler Portland June 27. Hill and Grantwere were unable to attend the ceremony.
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Tugboat crews prevent catastrophe during Ike PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 29 September 2008 01:55
 
Extra Pounds 10,000 to Restore 105-Year-Old Steamboat PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 14 March 2008 15:39
A PROJECT to restore a 105-year-old Merseyside steam tugboat saved from the scrap yard has been given another funding boost.

The Daniel Adamson is being brought back to its former glory by a team of dedicated volunteers who have clocked up more than 30,000 hours work on the vessel.

Right & below: Daniel Adamson, February 2004. Images used by permission of John H Luxton,

















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Read more... [Extra Pounds 10,000 to Restore 105-Year-Old Steamboat]
 
Lawmaker: Missing ammo poses New York harbor danger PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 16 January 2008 14:07
By RICHARD PYLE |Associated Press Writer
7:09 PM EST, January 14, 2008

NEW YORK - Before the city's Sanitation Department starts building a new garbage-transfer station on the edge of New York harbor, it may have to clean up something more potentially explosive than rancid food that stayed too long on the shelf, says a state lawmaker.

Back on March 6, 1954, hundreds of tons of Korean War-vintage munitions were being loaded off the aircraft carrier USS Bennington when a sudden storm caused a barge to capsize and break loose, spilling its cargo. By the time the barge was found upside down six miles away, it was empty.

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Read more... [Lawmaker: Missing ammo poses New York harbor danger]
 
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