Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Japanese Man Visits British Columbia To Reunite With Boat Lost In 2011 Tsunami

The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2015 12:30 PM
    KLEMTU, B.C. — A Japanese fisherman is to be reunited with his boat more than four years after a powerful tsunami hit his country and carried the craft to the shores of British Columbia.
     
    Kou Sasaki arrived in Vancouver on Monday and later this week will be heading to the coastal village of Klemtu, where his vessel washed up in the spring of 2013.
     
    Spirit Bear Lodge manager Tim McGrady said a hereditary chief's son found the boat, which was in remarkable condition after its journey across the Pacific Ocean.
     
    McGrady said he claimed the vessel but dreamed of one day learning who owned it. That mystery was solved with the help of a Japanese-speaking Canadian who stayed at the lodge last year with her husband, philanthropist and art collector Michael Audain.
     
    McGrady said Yoshi Karasawa translated the boat's name as "Two Pines" and eventually found Sasaki, whose wife and son died in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that killed 19,000 people.
     
    "He was very excited to come and be reunited with his boat and meet the people here in Klemtu," McGrady said. "I think it's going to be quite a big deal for him.
     
    "For thousands of years they've lived from the sea's resources and been out on the sea on small boats, so I think there's that connection that will be instantaneous." 
     
    Sasaki is to be welcomed to Klemtu on Friday with a traditional First Nations blessing ceremony and songs by the Xai'Xais First Nation, McGrady said.
     
    He said Karasawa and Audain sponsored Sasaki's visit to Canada and will accompany him to Klemtu, a lush community in the heart of the so-called Great Bear rainforest, about 700 kilometres northwest of Vancouver.
     
    The white, seven-metre fibreglass boat with a blue trim has a unique design, McGrady said.
     
    "It's self bailing so it can flood with water and the water just drains out of it," he said, adding the vessel's hull, bow and stern include compartments for fish and allow water to circulate through them.
     
    "Everybody here loves it," McGrady said. "It's reminiscent of a boat called a panga that fishermen down in Mexico use."
     
    McGrady said the boat would be too expensive for Sasaki to transport to Japan.
     
    "He's bought a new boat and he's quite happy to just come and see that his boat is being used and being looked after," he said.
     
    "We're going to take him out and try and see some grizzly bears."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Error Turns Into $1.1 Million Win For Nine Online BC Lottery Corp. Players

    Error Turns Into $1.1 Million Win For Nine Online BC Lottery Corp. Players
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The BC Lottery Corp. says it is paying nine gamblers nearly $1.1 million because of a software error in one of its online video games.

    Error Turns Into $1.1 Million Win For Nine Online BC Lottery Corp. Players

    Boredom, Anxiety Weigh On Saskatchewan Evacuees Who Fled Flames And Smoke

    Boredom, Anxiety Weigh On Saskatchewan Evacuees Who Fled Flames And Smoke
    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — Trisha Halkett has one wish as she spends her second week out of her northern Saskatchewan home because of threatening wildfires. 

    Boredom, Anxiety Weigh On Saskatchewan Evacuees Who Fled Flames And Smoke

    B.C. Teenager Convicted Of Cyber 'Swatting' Sentenced To 16 Months In Jail For Criminal Harassment

    B.C. Teenager Convicted Of Cyber 'Swatting' Sentenced  To 16 Months In Jail For Criminal Harassment
    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — A British Columbia teenager has been sentenced to 16 months in jail for online pranks and threats that caused mayhem in communities as far away as Ontario, California and Florida.

    B.C. Teenager Convicted Of Cyber 'Swatting' Sentenced To 16 Months In Jail For Criminal Harassment

    Police Watchdog Called In To Probe RCMP Shooting On Vancouver Island

    Police Watchdog Called In To Probe RCMP Shooting On Vancouver Island
    PORT HARDY, B.C. — Mounties on northern Vancouver Island say the province's police watchdog is now investigating the shooting death of a man by officers.

    Police Watchdog Called In To Probe RCMP Shooting On Vancouver Island

    Pace Of Canadian Housing Starts Picks Up In June, Better Than Expected

    Pace Of Canadian Housing Starts Picks Up In June, Better Than Expected
    Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.'s seasonally adjusted rate of residential construction starts rose to 202,818 in June, up from 196,981 units in May.

    Pace Of Canadian Housing Starts Picks Up In June, Better Than Expected

    British Man And Former Soldier Of The Year Missing In B.C. Diving Accident

    British Man And Former Soldier Of The Year Missing In B.C. Diving Accident
    VANCOUVER — A 27-year-old British army veteran described as "no stranger to challenge" vanished during a recreational dive in waters off Victoria, but his family hopes a search will continue.

    British Man And Former Soldier Of The Year Missing In B.C. Diving Accident