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![]() Rescued from the sea Five anglers plucked from Gulf by fellow fisherman after high waves swamp boat What started as a day of spearfishing in the Gulf of Mexico nearly turned tragic for a Homosassa boater and his friends. Boat owner Quinten Brown, crewmember Everett Nichols, of Homosassa, and three others survived when their 28-foot power-motored catamaran overturned on Friday, 75 miles out in the Gulf, due west of Citrus County. While bracing the 6- to 10-foot and-climbing waves, Brown’s catamaran took on water faster than the two bilge pumps could evacuate, prompting the crew to send out mayday signals to the Coast Guard and other ships. “We were really scared,” Nichols said. “We were thinking 9-1-1 the whole time.” According to the 2011 Recreational Boating Statistics released by the U.S. Coast Guard, there were 4,588 accidents, 758 deaths and 3,081 injuries as a result of boating incidents caused by weather and water conditions in the nation. Even hitting the satellite spot device they had onboard, Brown and his crew were still unsure that the signal reached the Coast Guard, but their VHF radio had a static response to their stranded calls. Nearby, Joe Brown and his crewmates were returning home in their 28-foot *Parker* fishing boat from a two-day fishing trip 120 miles offshore when they received the mayday call. Brown heard the SOS and attempted to relay both his and the sinking vessel’s coordinates to the Coast Guard. “It was difficult for the Coast Guard to understand them, their transmission was partly broken,” Brown said. In preparation for the possibility of a sinking ship, Nichols told Quinten Brown, no relation to Joe Brown, to get his dive gear on, and told the rest of the crew to put on life vests. In addition to the flotation devices, Nichols and the crew grabbed firearms to defend themselves against sharks, and a flare gun to signal nearby boats. The sinking crew had no idea how long they were going to be in the water. “We didn’t know if they were going to find us today,” Nichols said about Brown’s search efforts. After their catamaran overturned, the crew positioned themselves in between the two hulls, waiting with their salvaged equipment and a portable radio. As boats a mile away came into view, Nichols attempted to signal with flares, but no one responded. Joe Brown kept getting transmissions from Nichols requesting that they turn left and right in order to confirm that they were seeing the right ship, but they never did. “There was a lot of miscommunication,” Brown said. “They kept thinking they saw us.” Still trying to get in contact with Joe Brown’s boat, signals from Nichols’ radio slowly directed the searching ship, but it wasn’t until an hour and a half later that Nichols finally saw Brown’s boat. “All of us started to wave our arms about and started shouting, praying the whole time that they could see us,” Nichols said. As the rescue boat approached the sinking hull, a dive platform was lowered to the stranded men. “I made sure that they had everyone on board,” Joe Brown said. “My main concern was to make sure nobody drifted away when their boat overturned.” Nichols, with scuba gear, dove underneath the catamaran to save any possible possessions and managed to salvage wallets and personal effects. Deciding that the catamaran would be a hassle to tow back to shore and would eventually sink, the crew left the boat in the 80-foot deep water. The Coast Guard in St. Petersburg sent a helicopter to the site, reaching the overturned boat around 4:30 p.m., just as Joe Brown’s rescue ship was leaving to go back to Cedar Key with the thankful crew. Coast Guard rescue crafts from Yankeetown were called off after the survivors were rescued. It wasn’t until 1 a.m. Saturday that the boat made landfall at Cedar Key, but spirits were still high even after the ordeal when Dewey Moore, Joe Brown’s first mate, joked with Quinten Brown. “I asked Quinten if he knew anybody who had a used boat trailer for sale, and he laughed,” Moore said. In the end, Everett Nichols will never forget what Joe Brown and his crew did for them and will always view them as people who went out of their own way and safety to rescue them. “People like Joe are few and far in between, and his outreaching hand is the strongest bond us fishermen have,” Nichols said. “He’s a hero and a half.” Nichols said they would wait for the seas to calm before setting out to go fishing again. http://www.chronicleonline.com/content/rescued-sea |
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