December
16, 2004 - QUINBY, VIRGINIA. – Coast Guard and Virginia Marine Police
officers rescued two men early Wednesday morning who were stranded in
the marshlands near Quinby.
Coast Guard
Station Wachapreague received a phone call from Rudolph Powell at 9:12
p.m. Tuesday reporting a vessel had not returned to Quinby after a
fishing trip that day.
Station
Wachapreague launched a 25-foot rescue boat to search the area where the
vessel operator said he would be fishing and suspected transit channels
of the vessel. Within 30 minutes the rescue effort was joined by a
rescue boat from the Virginia Marine Police, and at 11:36 p.m., a Coast
Guard rescue helicopter from Elizabeth City, N.C., also launched to
assist.
Shortly
after midnight, the Virginia Marine Police rescue boat located the
overdue vessel and two people, Lemuel Hart and William Merritt, abord.
They did not request medical attention and Virginia Marine Police towed
the vessel back to Quinby.
Hart, the
owner and operator of the vessel, said his engine became disabled on his
way back to port. He anchored his vessel and launched numerous
flares without any results. His anchor line then parted and his
vessel drifted into a marsh where he attempted to light fires with the
gas from his fuel can. He was finally able to start a fire with
the last of his fuel, which was seen by rescue units.
Rescue
crews were able to search in correct areas due to the information the
reporting source, Rudolph Powell, provided to the Coast Guard.
This is another reason why boaters should always file a float plan,
telling someone where they are going and when they will return.
Hart did
not have a radio or cellular phone onboard his vessel to notify anyone
of his situation. Having a radio on his vessel may have reduced
the amount of time he had to wait before being rescued.
The Coast
Guard credits the float plan, the alert reporting source, and the
resourcefulness of the vessel operator in the success of this case.