Unknown Drifters rescued from Motungārara Island, New Zealand

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DandyDon

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Two divers were rescued from Fisherman’s Island, off the Kāpiti Coast, after they became separated from their vessel on Sunday evening. The alarm was raised when the divers failed to surface near their boat about 5pm and the men’s partners called police. The men swam for over an hour in swirling currents to make it to the island.

The skipper of a Coastguard boat who rescued the two divers says the scenario is the stuff of nautical nightmares.

The divers were dragged south in swift currents, but managed to swim to a nearby island and even had provisions to light a fire, alerting the Westpac Rescue Helicopter to their location.

Coastguard skipper Mark Davidson said police were alerted by the diver’s partners – who were waiting on the divers’ boat – that they had lost contact with the men about 5pm on Sunday.

“Finding a boat out here for us is easy. We’ve got radar, boats are big and generally you can plot where you know where they may be. But for divers, there are a number of things that can happen when they’re underwater. They can become disorientated or the tides are running quicker than they suspect. In this case it was an outgoing tide, which runs quite strong out here.

“So you’ve then got a northerly wind that’s pushing towards the south and then you’ve got a reasonably strong current pushing towards the south as well. It makes it pretty difficult.”

Davidson said the divers surfaced and realised they had been pushed far from their support vessel. They made the call to swim for more than an hour to Motungārara, or Fisherman’s Island.

“They tried to contact their two partners on the boat. But the distance was growing [and] the light was starting to dim.

“They had to make a decision to self-rescue, which they did. They’re going against a very strong tide here, which swirls around those islands. So they would have been working hard.”

Davidson said the men were well-equipped with high-quality gear, buoyancy aids and personal rescue kits, which included the matches they used to light a fire once ashore.

“Worst-case scenario for us was that they’d washed past the islands and were heading south. So we were set up to do a long, creeping line search orientating south and – given the conditions – we could have expected them probably to float for four nautical miles, which is a long way.

“We were well-assisted by the Westpac Rescue Helicopter out of Wellington. They spotted the fire. They couldn’t get down low to see but – from our local knowledge – we knew that there was nobody else on that island so it had to be the divers,” Davidson said.

Once found, the men were well and in good spirits, he said.

“They were more interested and concerned about their girlfriends in the tender boat, because they knew the girls would be worried sick about them. But physically, they were in terrific shape because they had good gear and they’d looked after themselves.”

Davidson said he was grateful for the work of the police, Westpac Rescue Helicopter and local Coastguard volunteers – both at sea and on land – who all came together for a great result.
 
is carrying matches while diving a common thing? never known anybody else to do that.
That surprised me. A larger canister and a PLB could be more rewarding.
 
Perhaps they are smokers?
 
Perhaps they are smokers?
When I was a smoker, I considered getting a canister that could hold a butane lighter and a couple of smokes to enjoy on a drift line behind a nonsmoking boat but decided that would be absurd. Whatever their motive for the matches, a butane lighter would have been better. Even if they get wet, they can be dried and used.
 
I have in the past carried a small survival kit in my gear while diving but not on a regular basis. It depends on the dive area. I don't carry matches or a lighter in it. I carry a Magnesium sparker zip starter because it doesn't care if it's wet of dry.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/peregrine/

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