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  • 25
    Apr
    2013
    8:22pm, EDT

    US tourists swim for 14 hours after ship sinks off St. Lucia

    Courtesy of Dan Suski / AP

    This Nov. 2009 photo courtesy of Dan Suski shows Kate Suski, right, and her brother Dan while on vacation in San Diego, Ca. The brother and sister are recovering in the eastern Caribbean island of St. Lucia after their ship sank on April 21 during a fishing trip.

    By Danica Coto, The Associated Press

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The fishing trip off the rugged north coast of St. Lucia was supposed to last all day, but about four hours into the journey, the boat's electric system crackled and popped.

    Dan Suski, a 30-year-old business owner and information technology expert from San Francisco, had been wrestling a 200-pound marlin in rough seas with help from his sister, Kate Suski, a 39-year-old architect from Seattle. It was around noon April 21.

    He was still trying to reel in the fish when water rushed into the cabin and flooded the engine room, prompting the captain to radio for help as he yelled out their coordinates.

    It would be nearly 14 hours and a long, long swim before what was supposed to be a highlight of their sunny vacation would come to an end.

    As the waves pounded the boat they had chartered from the local company "Reel Irie," more water flooded in. The captain threw life preservers to the Suskis.

    "He said, 'Jump out! Jump out!'" Kate Suski recalled in a telephone interview Thursday with The Associated Press.

    The Suskis obeyed and jumped into the water with the captain and first mate. Less than five minutes later, the boat sank.

    The group was at least eight miles from shore, and waves more than twice their size tossed them.

    "The captain was telling us to stay together, and that help was on its way and that we needed to wait," Kate Suski said.

    The group waited for about an hour, but no one came.

    "I was saying, 'Let's swim, let's swim. If they're coming, they will find us. We can't just stay here,'" she recalled.

    As they began to swim, the Suskis lost sight of the captain and first mate amid the burgeoning swells. Soon after, they also lost sight of land amid the rain.

    "We would just see swells and gray," Dan Suski said.

    A plane and a helicopter appeared in the distance and hovered over the area, but no one spotted the siblings.

    Several hours went by, and the sun began to set.

    "There's this very real understanding that the situation is dire," Kate Suski said. "You come face-to-face with understanding your own mortality ... We both processed the possible ways we might die. Would we drown? Be eaten by a shark?"

    "Hypothermia?" Dan Suski asked.

    "Would our legs cramp up and make it impossible to swim?" the sister continued.

    They swam for 12 to 14 hours, talking as they pushed and shivered their way through the ocean. Dan Suski tried to ignore images of the movie "Open Water" that kept popping into his head and its story of a scuba-diving couple left behind by their group and attacked by sharks. His sister said she also couldn't stop thinking about sharks.

    "I thought I was going to vomit I was so scared," she said.

    When they finally came within 30 feet of land, they realized they couldn't get out of the water.

    "There were sheer cliffs coming into the ocean," she said. "We knew we would get crushed."

    Dan Suski thought they should try to reach the rocks anyway, but his sister disagreed.

    "We won't survive that," she told him.

    They swam until they noticed a spit of sand nearby. When they got to land, they collapsed, barely able to walk. It was past midnight, and they didn't notice any homes in the area.

    "Dan said the first priority was to stay warm," she recalled.

    They hiked inland and lay side by side, pulling up grass and brush to cover themselves and stay warm. Kate Suski had only her bikini on, having shed her sundress to swim better. Dan Suski had gotten rid of his shorts, having recalled a saying when he was a kid that "the best-dressed corpses wear cotton."

    They heard a stream nearby but decided to wait until daylight to determine whether the water was safe to drink.

    As the sun came up, they began to hike through thick brush, picking up bitter mangoes along the way and stopping to eat green bananas.

    "It was probably the best and worst banana I've ever had," Dan Suski recalled.

    Some three hours later, they spotted a young farm worker walking with his white dog. He fed them crackers, gave them water and waited until police arrived, the Suskis said.

    "We asked if he knew anything about the captain and mate," Kate Suski said. "He said he had seen the news the night before and they hadn't been found at that time. I think we felt a sense of tragedy that we weren't prepared for."

    The Suskis were hospitalized and received IV fluids, with doctors concerned they couldn't draw blood from Kate Suski's arm because she was so dehydrated. They also learned that the captain and mate were rescued after spending nearly 23 hours in the water, noting that their relatives called and took care of them after the ordeal.

    St. Lucia's tourism minister called it a miracle, and the island's maritime affairs unit is investigating exactly what caused the ship to sink. Marine Police Sgt. Finley Leonce said they have already interviewed the captain, and that police did not suspect foul play or any criminal activity in the sinking of the ship.

    A man who answered the phone Thursday at the "Reel Irie" company declined to comment except to say that he's grateful everyone is safe. He said both the captain and first mate were standing next to him but that they weren't ready to talk about the incident.

    The brother and sister said they don't blame anyone for the shipwreck.

    "We are so grateful to be alive right now," Kate Suski said. "Nothing can sort of puncture that bubble."

    Upon returning to their hotel in St. Lucia earlier this week, the Suskis were upgraded to a suite as they recover from cuts on their feet, severe tendonitis in their ankles from swimming and abrasions from the lifejackets.

    "It's really been amazing," Dan Suski said. "It's a moving experience for me."

    On Saturday, they plan to fly back to the U.S. to meet their father in Miami.

    Once a night owl, Kate Suski no longer minds getting up early for flights, or for any other reason.

    "Since this ordeal, I've been waking up at dawn every morning," she said. "I've never looked forward to the sunrise so much in my life."

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    110 comments

    "subbie", you are pervert. Glad to hear everyone survived and what an adventure they had!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, ocean, tourists, st-lucia
  • 4
    Mar
    2013
    11:53am, EST

    Ocean stink prompts 911 calls in Los Angeles

     

    By Sharon Bernstein and Heather Navarro, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Methane gas from the sea floor caused a foul odor on Sunday that prompted nearly 100 emergency calls from residents reporting the stench from Santa Monica to West Los Angeles, officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The odor, which smelled like sulfur, was first reported late Saturday, air quality officials said. The smell wafted in from the Santa Monica Bay.

    Justin Walker, a Santa Monica Fire Department spokesman, said hazardous-materials crews found small increments of methane gas in the air at 8:30 a.m. 

    The amount of methane in the air was not considered dangerous, Walker said, adding he's heard of this type of incident happening up to six times in the last four years.

    More from NBCLosAngeles.com

    Hazardous-materials crews were called out after dispatchers reported some 80 calls to 911 of residents reporting the stench.

    Methane is usually released when the tectonic plates shift, Walker said. This shift was small and did not cause an earthquake, he said.

    A cold weather front that moved in overnight and brought onshore winds with it caused the smell to waft inland, he said.

    "The marine layer vacuumed it up because it had nowhere to go out," Walker said.

    Inspectors from the South Coast Air Quality Management District, Southern California's air pollution control agency, were also investigating.

    Maria Carlito Covarrubias, writing on the NBC4 Facebook page, said she smelled the odor Saturday night at about 11:45 p.m.

    Another Facebook user, Summers McKay, said she called her building manager because she was worried that the smell was a gas leak.

    124 comments

    Methane has no color or odor. The sulfur smell had to have been from decaying matter upturned by a 'bubble' on the sea floor, or possibly the position of Californica legislators upwind from the scene. Californica lawmakers will now probably ban bad smells from the ocean.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ocean, los-angeles, odor, sulfur, methane-gas, nbclosangeles
  • 28
    Nov
    2012
    6:07am, EST

    Lava flows to the ocean in Hawaii, creating rare natural show

    Hugh Gentry / Reuters

    Waves crash over lava as it flows into the ocean near Volcanoes National Park in Kalapana, Hawaii on November 27, 2012.

    Hugh Gentry / Reuters

    Reuters reports — A volcano on Hawaii's largest island is spilling lava into the ocean, creating a rare and spectacular fusion of steam and waves that officials said could attract thrill-seeking visitors if it continues.

    Lava from a vent in Kilauea Volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii began flowing into the ocean 7 miles away on Saturday. The volcano has been erupting continuously from its Pu'u O'o vent since 1983.

    Hugh Gentry / Reuters

    A plume of smoke rises from the volcanic activity in Kilauea crater on November 27, 2012.

    Janet Babb, spokeswoman for the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, warned of potentially deadly risks and urged visitors to stay a safe distance away and respect barriers placed around the lava flow.

    "Ocean entries can be quite beautiful but also quite dangerous," Babb said. Read the full story.

    Hugh Gentry / Reuters

    Hugh Gentry / Reuters

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Hawaii's Kilauea Volcano is sending lava into the ocean for the first time in 11 months. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

     

    61 comments

    God's creation is Awesome... the beauty of Nature Never ceases to amaze me.. I would gladly want to see this in person... (safely).

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hawaii, ocean, volcano, us-news, kilauea, lava, featured, commentid-featured
  • 21
    May
    2012
    4:14am, EDT

    Thousands of pounds of pot worth $3.6 million found floating off Calif. coast

    Laguna Niguel Patch

    Bales of marijuana found floating off the California coast are offloaded onto a dock.

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com

    Harbor Patrol officers found nearly 8,000 pounds worth of marijuana floating off the coast of Orange County, Calif., on Sunday, according to reports.

    The marijuana found south of Los Angeles was packed in around 160 bales and had an estimated street value of $3.6 million, border patrol agents told CBS Los Angeles.


    "Shortly before noon on Sunday, May 20, maritime law enforcement authorities received a tip about suspicious bales floating in the water off the coast of Orange County, near Dana Point," border patrol agent supervisor Michael Jimenez said in a statement.

    The haul reportedly totaled 7,263 pounds.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Marijuana grows openly in California towns, not just for medicinal purposes

    Coast guard petty officer Seth Johnson told the Orange County Register that the bales were first reported by a boater who saw them floating around 15 miles offshore.

    Three Harbor Patrol ships and a Coast Guard cutter were sent to recover the marijuana from the water.

    The incident was out of the ordinary, Jimenez told the Register.

    Report: Marijuana use grows, cocaine falls among men arrested in 10 US cities

    "At other events, they've dumped the bales to get rid of weight if they're being chased," he said. "Generally in these cases we're aware they're being dumped. What's more unusual is that the bales were floating with no boat in sight."

    No suspects or vessel have been identified in connection to an ongoing investigation, the Register reported.

    Law enforcement authorities say drug traffickers are hiding behind California's medical marijuana laws, established in 1996 to help people manage nausea and pain associated with serious illnesses, and distributing the drug illegally. Current TV's Adam Yamaguchi reports in this Rock Center online exclusive netcast.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Great-grandma: Ready to 'lose' my life protesting
    • US war veterans return medals at NATO protest
    • Father of 30, by 11 women, wants state child support
    • Marijuana grows openly in California towns, not just for medicinal purposes
    • Video: Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg gets married

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    499 comments

    Could have been a Hi Tide eh?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, marijuana, ocean, floating, orange-county, pot, featured, dana-point
  • 11
    May
    2012
    3:42am, EDT

    88,000-mile journey? Plastic card makes landfall in Alaska after 33-year sea voyage

    James Poulson / Daily Sitka Sentinel via AP

    Beachcomber Emmitt Andersen, 12, holds up a plastic card set adrift by NOAA in the 1970s that he found in Sitka, Alaska.

    By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    A plastic card dropped into the ocean 33 years ago has been found on the coast of Alaska, after a potential 88,000-mile journey.

    The drift card was one of thousands put into the Bering Sea by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration staff in the late 1970s and early 1980s, as part of a project to find out where oil would go if there was a spill.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    About the size of a postcard, it offered a reward of $1 for its return in three languages: English, Japanese and Russian.


    It was found on a beach at Sealion Cove, near Sitka, Alaska, last month by 12-year-old middle school student and keen beachcomber Emmitt Anderson. "We never know what we're going to find ... I just like to find stuff. When I don't find stuff, I'm not very happy," Anderson told the Daily Sitka Sentinel newspaper.

    'Amazingly good condition'
    His father Steve contacted NOAA and was put in touch with oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer, who tracks flotsam as it rides the world's currents.

    Ebbesmeyer told msnbc.com that Anderson's drift card had likely been caught in the Aleut gyre, circulating ocean currents that take three years to make an 8,000-mile orbit.

    "The question is how many times did it go around? I think it's likely it went around once, it could have gone round 11 times. It's possible it went 88,000 miles. It could have short-circuited the gyre … we'll never quite know," he said.

    Courtesy Curt Ebbesmeyer

    This plastic card may have traveled 88,000 mile, according to oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer.

    "Everything in the ocean, particularly plastic, can travel great, great distances," he added.

    Follow Ian Johnston

    Ebbesmeyer said the drift card was in "amazingly good condition."

    "After 33 years in the ocean, [it] is in quite readable condition," he said. "Plastic doesn't degrade very fast."

    Much of the plastic that finds its way into the sea will travel the world for years to come.

    "Half of all plastic cannot sink because of its specific gravity. It's as if it was in prison in Flatland [a fictional two-dimensional world]," Ebbesmeyer said.

    Study: Plastic in 'Great Pacific Garbage Patch' increases 100-fold

    While Anderson's drift card did not make landing very far from where it was released, others have ended up in Europe.

    "Across the North Pole, down past Greenland, down to almost New York City, over to the vicinity of London, then turn south to France. That's probably the longest certifiable drift," Ebbesmeyer said.

    Even if the Sitka drift card traveled 88,000 miles that may not be the longest ever journey by a piece of plastic in the sea.

    Dec. 29: NBC's Kerry Sanders reports on a huge mass of garbage floating in the Pacific Ocean that is killing marine life and growing larger each day.

    An albatross found on Midway Island in the Pacific in 2004 was found to have 512 pieces of plastic in its stomach.

    One piece was discovered to have come from a downed aircraft from World War II. It was likely caught in the 12,000-mile turtle gyre, which takes about six years to make its full circle.

    Ebbesmeyer said that if that piece of plastic made 10 orbits in 60 years, that would mean it traveled 120,000 miles, equivalent to about five times round the Earth.

    Plastic ducks, frogs
    He also tracks some 28,800 plastic bath toys called Floatees – turtles, ducks, beavers and frogs – that were lost overboard from a container ship in the mid-Pacific in 1992. 

    Hundreds drifted some 2,200 miles and beached -- like Emmett Anderson's drift card -- near Sitka, Alaska.

    To date, a duck was seen in Maine in July 2003, while a green plastic frog was spotted in Scotland in August 2003.

    Ebbesmeyer, who usually gets one or two reports a year about the floating toys, said some of them may be approaching an epic achievement: Circumnavigating the globe.

    "It's possible they have gone something like in the order of round the world," he said.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp axed
    • WWII fighter plane found preserved in Sahara Desert
    • Egypt's first TV presidential debate thrills viewers
    • 88,000-mile voyage? Plastic card found after 33 years
    • Hell-raising holy men: Boozy monks caught gambling
    • Sources: Spy who uncovered underwear bomb plot is a Brit
    • Video: Murder and corruption scandal rocks China
    • Move over, Al Roker! Prince Charles becomes weatherman

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    120 comments

    The real question is did he get his dollar!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: alaska, environment, ocean, plastic, featured, flotsam, currents, curtis-ebbesmeyer

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