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Sailor swears off sea after ordeal
By JESSICA JOHNSTON 17jan07 A SET of footprints in the wet sand led to the rescue of a man whose yacht had run aground off Alva Beach on Monday night. Geoffrey Deverdic yesterday said he had given up the sea for good after his terrifying ordeal. Mr Deverdic was sailing his 8m motorised yacht Stress Leave from Port Douglas to his home in Port Macquarie when he struck rough seas off Ayr. The former naval crewman and accomplished yachtsman was forced to abandon ship and swim more than a mile to safety through crocodile-infested waters. "I wasn't keen on swimming and that was before I knew there was crocodiles in the water. As I was coming out, a big one swam right past me," Mr Deverdic said. The trouble started when Mr Deverdic hit rough seas off the coast from Ayr, about 8pm. "I thought I would seek some shelter at Alva Beach and take the opportunity to do some repairs," Mr Deverdic said. "I put the sails down, dropped the anchor and went down to start work. "But all of a sudden three big waves came, and the rudder snapped and washed us up." Mr Deverdic was hurled from the boat and into the water. "It was quite shallow, I was able to walk for most of the way, but I had to swim a bit, to cross a lagoon when I got back to shore. "I saw lights and halfway across the lagoon I became disorientated. But I saw a red flashing buoy that I used as a marker." Mr Deverdic said it took him at least three or four hours to cover the mile or so back to the beach. When he finally reached dry land, Mr Deverdic stripped off his wet clothes and hung them up to dry, before trying to settle down for a long, cold night's sleep. But Ayr Police Sergeant Jeffrey Killick said a search and rescue mission was already under way for the man. He said authorities were alerted after a number of red flares were seen offshore from Alva Beach about 8.10pm. The yacht could be seen from the shore, wedged on a sandbar. Sgt Killick said the Burdekin Coastguard had taken a small vessel out to the yacht, but found no one on board. The search intensified, until police found a set of footprints in the wet sand, about 150-200m from where the boat had run aground. Sgt Killick said police followed the footprints and found Mr Deverdic on the beach about 3.30am. He was taken to Ayr Hospital for observation, but later released without treatment. Mr Deverdic returned to the fateful site at Alva Beach yesterday, where the top of the mast could be seen bobbing about 400m offshore. But though the yacht stands little chance of salvage, Mr Deverdic found the thongs he had lost the night before, washed up on the beach. "I was out there pretty much all night, it happened right on dusk," Mr Deverdic said. "I'm absolutely exhausted. I was terrified. I've given up the sea for good." Mr Deverdic said he would try to salvage the boat to donate to the Port Macquarie naval base. He plans to rest and recuperate at Alva Beach for the next day or so before heading back to his anxious family in Port Macquarie. |