AGUADILLA, Puerto Rico (AP) — David Thompson felt the smack of a wave
and found himself hanging by a tether off the back of his sailboat in
the Atlantic Ocean, the northern coast of Puerto Rico off in the
distance.
No problem, Thompson thought. He was still tied to his boat, wearing his
life jacket. All he had to do was hoist himself back onto his boat.
But conditions were rough: 20-knot winds and 10-foot swells. As he
climbed back on board, another wave tossed him off. Then the surging
water stripped away his life jacket, which had linked him to the boat,
and he watched as the boat moved farther away by the second.
"My arms were so tired, I couldn't grab ahold of anything anymore," the
68-year-old said Wednesday from a hospital in Puerto Rico, where he is
recovering from his ordeal. "So I was watching my boat sail away. I was
thinking that was it."
Yet he kept himself going. He swam and floated on his back and swam — on
and on for seven hours, finally crawling onto a Puerto Rico beach after
dark, half naked and exhausted.
Thompson, a retired engineer from Kalamazoo, Michigan, who was sailing
solo when he went overboard, is being treated for dehydration and
expects to be hospitalized for at least four days.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Thompson said he had been
with his wife, Donna, in St. Maarten. She flew home and he was taking
their 49-foot boat, the Enthalpy II, to South Florida. It was about 1
p.m. Sunday when he was knocked overboard.
He recalled that the wave that took his life jacket also stripped off
his clothes except for his shirt, leaving him almost naked as he floated
in the water and considered his options.
Thompson made his way toward land, about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) away.
He alternated between floating and swimming, thinking about his 2
1/2-year-old granddaughter to keep himself going.
"I wanted to see her and hug her again. And I have a wife and a nice life. I didn't want to die."
Thompson kept swimming. A sharp reef cut into his legs as he scrambled
onto land. Aware that he was naked, Thompson took off his shirt, stepped
into the arm holes to fashioned makeshift shorts before looking for
help. He knocked on the door of several homes and called out for help,
but none came.
"When they saw me, I was walking like I was drunk because I didn't have
any strength left in my legs," which were bleeding. "I didn't look like
someone you wanted to invite to dinner."
Finally, he arrived at Villas del Mar Hau, a seaside hotel in the north
coastal town of Isabela. He stumbled into the restaurant and asked
waiters for help. They gave him food, water and clothes that a previous
guest had left behind.
"That man ate so much rice and beans that it seemed like he had not
eaten for three days," said Sandra Villanueva, the hotel owner's
assistant. "I truly admire him. He was so beat up. He had lost all his
clothes. His head, his hands, his feet were all beat up."
The hotel called police and the U.S. Coast Guard, and Thompson was taken
to the nearby hospital in Aguadilla. Officials at the private hospital
would not allow an AP journalist inside, but Thompson said by phone that
he was awaiting dialysis to get rid of the tremendous amount of protein
built up in his body. He was too weak to hold a cup of coffee.
His wife said in a phone interview from Michigan that she was not surprised her husband survived.
"He is stubborn. He is determined. He is like one of the strongest
people I've ever known. Once he sets his mind to something, you are not
going to change him, which can be aggravating from a wife's point of
view," she said with a laugh.
The Thompsons had planned to vacation in the Florida Keys or possibly
the Bahamas next year in their sailboat, which the U.S. Coast Guard
recovered, but those plans are on hold.
"Knowing that your husband is on a boat by himself, and getting a call
from the Coast Guard is the worst call you can get," she said, choking
up. "The fact that the boat came through and that he was able to come
through, it's a miracle."
1 comment:
Good for him.
But the story does race some interesting questions about the value of a tether. And also what kind of life jacket can be pulled off by a wave.
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