'They were lucky': 5 crew members saved from sinking mussel boat in Malpeque Harbour
New London fire department's rescue boat able to save 5 crew from sinking vessel
All the crew members of a mussel-fishing boat that ran aground off Malpeque Harbour on P.E.I.'s North Shore Monday morning were rescued by members of the local fire department after having to take refuge on the vessel's roof.
The 15-metre vessel ran aground on a sandbar and started taking on water in rough seas just after 8 a.m. Monday, said Timothy Wall, a fisherman from the area.
The New London Fire Company told CBC News there were five people aboard, all of them wearing life jackets at the time of the rescue.
The fire department's new rigid inflatable boat was able to get all five crew members off of the sinking vessel just after 9 a.m.
A spokesperson for the Canadian Coast Guard's Joint Rescue Coordination Centre in Halifax said there were no medical issues or injuries reported among the crew.
The spokesperson said the plan is to tow the boat out of the harbour sometime today.
Wall said the boat was trying to bring a load of mussels in when it struck the sandbar.
"When the boat went aground, everybody just kind of climbed on the side, then they had to climb on the roof," he said. "It's dangerous — it's rocky and it's windy and it's cold."
'The system works'
Alan Doucette, a firefighter and medical first responder with the New London department, was aboard the rescue craft. He said the water conditions and depth made it difficult for other nearby fishing boats to assist, since they would have been in danger of getting stranded as well.
"The tide was coming in fast, the wind was in our face and the waves were really, really big. They were crashing over the boat," Doucette said.
"They were lucky, but they did everything right," he said of the crew members.
"They put their life jackets on, they got up high on the vessel, they radioed out for help, the other boats came [and] we came along. The system works."
The New London Fire Company received the rigid inflatable boat earlier this year.
Because it was available, the rescue crew was able to make it to the stranded fishermen "before things went bad," said firefighter Jonathan Gillis.
"We just had Mother's Day and the very next day we just rescued five guys — five dads, fathers, uncles, you know — and that makes a big difference in a small community like P.E.I."
Corrections
- An earlier version of this story referred to the rescue craft as a Zodiac, a common brand name for a rigid inflatable boat. The craft is actually a Highlander-brand vessel.May 16, 2024 8:29 AM AT
With files from Steve Bruce