Castaways adrift in the Pacific survive 29 days by eating coconuts floating past

Castaways adrift in the Pacific survive 29 days by eating coconuts floating past By Darlene Regis - October 10, 2021
Castaways adrift in the Pacific survive 29 days by eating coconuts floating past

Two castaways survived 29 days adrift in the Pacific Ocean by feasting on supplies of oranges and catching coconuts that floated past their boat

Two men cast adrift in the Pacific Ocean incredibly survived for 29 days by eating coconuts which bobbed up to their boat and by catching rainwater.

Solomon Islanders Licvae Nanjikana and Junior Qoloni set out from Mono Island on September 3 on what should have been a 124-mile voyage to new South Georgia.

The experienced seamen had taken the trip before and planned to use visual markers to help guide their route.

But the pair ran into disaster when torrential rain and heavy winds battered their small motorboat.

During the storms, their GPS packed in and the men found themselves cast adrift in a notoriously rough and unpredictable stretch of water.

Two men cast adrift in the Pacific Ocean survived for 29 days by eating coconuts

Two men cast adrift in the Pacific Ocean survived for 29 days by eating coconuts.

“We have done the trip before and it should have been OK,” Nanjikana told the Guardian.

Without global positioning, they had no way of telling which direction to turn.

They decided to stop the engine in the hopes of saving fuel, Nanjikana said.

The men had taken a store of oranges with them, which helped to keep them alive.

Another source of food came in the form of coconuts bobbing along the waves.

The men fought off dehydration by using a piece of canvas to catch falling rain.

The duo floated 283 miles before being spotted by a fisherman off the coast of New Britain, Papua New Guinea.

“We didn’t know where we were but did not expect to be in another country,” Nanjikana said.

Their small motorboat was battered by tropical rains and wind as their GPS died - leaving them without guidance on where to go

Their small motorboat was battered by tropical rains and wind as their GPS died - leaving them without guidance on where to go.

The men were so weak when they were rescued on October 3 that locals had to carry them off the boat.

They are currently living with a local resident in Pomio on the south of New Britain island.

Nanjikana said the ordeal was a "nice break from Covid", the Guardian reports.

“I had no idea what was going on while I was out there. I didn’t hear about Covid or anything else,” he said.

“I look forward to going back home but I guess it was a nice break from everything.”

Earlier this year, a trio shipwrecked on a deserted island in the Bahamas were rescued after somehow surviving for 33 days.

One of the men said the ordeal was a

One of the men said the ordeal was a 'nice break from Covid.'

Source: Mirror UK

By Darlene Regis - October 10, 2021

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