Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man Survives Hours Adrift In Ocean By Holding On To Jerry Cans, Crab Float

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Nov, 2015 11:08 AM
  • B.C. Man Survives Hours Adrift In Ocean By Holding On To Jerry Cans, Crab Float
VANCOUVER — Kevin Strain is having difficult deciding where he'll hang the crab float he credits with saving his life.
 
But he's not about to get rid of the small, luminous buoy that helped him survive more than two hours adrift after the boat he was travelling on struck a rock off Vancouver Island and tossed him overboard last week.
 
"Either over the bar or in the kitchen, or maybe over the galley table," said Strain about possible locations, speaking by phone from his home on Malcolm Island, off the northern tip of Vancouver Island.
 
"I was thinking of Tom Hanks from (the 2000 Hollywood movie) Cast Away," he added, laughing. "This is my Wilson."
 
Strain left Malcolm Island last Tuesday aboard the 20-metre, 50-tonne Oliver Clark II, which he was helping a friend shuttle to Vancouver.
 
It was about 2 a.m. the next day and the boat had just entered the opening of the Yucataw Rapids — a nasty water feature sandwiched between Sonora and Stuart islands — when it hit a rock that lifted the boat's stern into the air and rolled it violently onto the left side.
 
"It felt like the bow dropped into a hole," said Strain. "That's when I got ejected out of the wheelhouse. I was standing just to the left of the captain, who was at the wheel, and I went right through the wheelhouse door on the port side and right over the rail.
 
"I was standing there one minute, I felt the impact and the next minute I'm in the water," he said. "I don't even remember going through the doorway."
 
Strain, who wasn't wearing a life jacket, quickly managed to grab on to a pair of empty 20-litre jerry cans that had also been tossed into the water. The buoyant, bright-red containers helped him stay afloat as he was repeatedly dragged below the surface in a series of whirlpools.
 
"I was sucked under and spit back out and sucked under and spit back out," said Strain. "I closed my eyes because I was getting dizzy from going around."
 
Within a few minutes he was out of the rapids, being swept away in a strong current that prevented him from swimming back to the boat.
 
Using the jerry cans and a crab float he spotted under the light of the full moon, Strain recalled propping his upper body out of the water and kicking for shore, buoyed by thoughts of his wife and three young children.
 
"First of all it was, 'I'm going to die.' Then it was, 'Holy crap, I made it.' Then it was, 'If I don't make it out of this I'm never going to see my family again.'"
 
More than two hours later, Strain managed to grab on to a rocky outcropping and pull himself ashore to escape the current.
 
After wringing out his water-logged hoodie, he watched from afar while coast guard boats and a rescue helicopter scoured the channel looking for him. Eventually, around 6 a.m., his yelling caught the attention of rescuers on board a civilian boat helping with the search.
 
Despite spending hours in the water, which he said coast guard officials estimated to be around 10 degrees Celsius, Strain was remarkably unscathed, escaping with little more than bruising along his left side where he slammed into the wheelhouse door on his way overboard.
 
"I never stopped kicking. I think just working, keeping the blood flowing, was helping me out a bit. I think if I'd just drifted I would have frozen pretty quick," he said.
 
"Everybody says, 'You're tough,' or whatever, but I think it's more stubbornness than anything," he added, laughing. "Just not giving up — not giving up."

MORE National ARTICLES

Group Were Playing Around Before School Bus Hit And Killed Teen: Witness

Group Were Playing Around Before School Bus Hit And Killed Teen: Witness
The videotape testimony came on the second day of the trial of a 15-year-old boy charged with criminal negligence causing death.

Group Were Playing Around Before School Bus Hit And Killed Teen: Witness

Ontario First Nations Chiefs Raise Funds To Pay For Inquiry Into Missing Women

First Nations Chiefs in Ontario are launching an online fundraising campaign to pay for their own public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

Ontario First Nations Chiefs Raise Funds To Pay For Inquiry Into Missing Women

Family, Friends Gather To Remember University Student Police Say Was Murdered

Family, Friends Gather To Remember University Student Police Say Was Murdered
William Sandeson, a 22-year-old varsity track athlete who was about to start classes at Dalhousie's medical school, was charged with first-degree murder on Aug. 20, four days after Samson was reported missing.

Family, Friends Gather To Remember University Student Police Say Was Murdered

Provincial Calls For More Syrian Refugees Misses Money Question: Expert

Provincial Calls For More Syrian Refugees Misses Money Question: Expert
University of Toronto sociology professor Monica Boyd said such requests amount to asking the federal government to pay the tab — about $35,000 per refugee family in the first year.

Provincial Calls For More Syrian Refugees Misses Money Question: Expert

Bank Of Canada Keeps Key Rate On Hold At 0.5 Per Cent As Resource Sector Adjusts

Bank Of Canada Keeps Key Rate On Hold At 0.5 Per Cent As Resource Sector Adjusts
OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada kept its key interest rate on hold at 0.5 per cent on Wednesday and said the country's resource sector continues to adjust to lower prices for oil and other commodities.

Bank Of Canada Keeps Key Rate On Hold At 0.5 Per Cent As Resource Sector Adjusts

Syrian Refugee Queries Draws Catcalls From Conservative Supporters

Syrian Refugee Queries Draws Catcalls From Conservative Supporters
A Conservative supporter at a Stephen Harper campaign event heckled a reporter Wednesday who was asking about the government's handling of the Syrian refugee crisis.

Syrian Refugee Queries Draws Catcalls From Conservative Supporters