Posted on 09/24/2002 11:57:46 AM PDT by Sweet_Sunflower29
Adrift in his damaged sailboat for 31/2 months, a Long Beach man was found alive by a San Diego-based warship off the coast of Costa Rica more than 2,500 miles from his home port.
Richard Van Pham, 62, was rescued a week ago by the frigate McClusky and turned over to U.S. officials in Guatemala on Sunday, Navy officials said yesterday.
He survived by catching fish, seabirds and turtles for food and collecting rainwater, said Navy crewmen who found him Sept. 17. Despite losing about 40 pounds and being heavily suntanned, Van Pham was in good condition when found, they reported.
"He's a tough old bird," said Cmdr. Gary Parriott, the McClusky's skipper, in a satellite phone interview yesterday. "I'm not sure I would have fared as well as he did."
Van Pham was dropped off in Puerto Quetzal, Guatemala, on Sunday when the frigate stopped for a port visit. Efforts to locate him in Guatemala City were unsuccessful last night.
The McClusky's crew collected about $800 to pay the hapless mariner's air fare home.
The incredible story of bad luck and survival began as a short cruise from Long Beach to Catalina in Van Pham's 26-foot sailboat Sea Breeze. A storm broke his mast. His outboard motor and two-way radio also failed.
For unknown reasons, Van Pham was not reported missing by friends, and he told officials he has no family. No search was conducted because no missing persons report was filed, Coast Guard officials said.
Van Pham was spotted 275 miles southwest of Costa Rica when a U.S. Customs Service P-3 drug-hunting plane saw his derelict vessel and asked the McClusky to check it out.
When the warship's boat neared, they saw a man cooking a sea gull on a makeshift grill the ship's wooden trim supplying the fuel. A jury-rigged sail flapped from a splintered mast.
Hailing the boat in Spanish, Petty Officer 3rd Class Elias Nunez said he was surprised when Van Pham answered, "I don't speak Spanish. I speak English."
Van Pham was equally surprised when the sailors told him what month and day it was and where he was, Nunez said.
The ship's corpsman, Petty Officer 1st Class A.J. Davis said Van Pham was in exceptional health.
Davis spent hours talking to Van Pham, who described bashing sea turtles with a bat as they swam near the boat, hauling the carcasses aboard and then cooking part of the meat while using the remainder as bait for seabirds that would roost on the broken mast.
"This is an amazing story of survival," Coast Guard Chief Warrant Officer Lance Jones said yesterday. "But it also shows the importance of filing a float plan with friends or family."
If the Coast Guard had known he was missing, a search might have found him much earlier, said Jones.
The most poignant moment came when Van Pham left the Sea Breeze.
"He waved goodbye to his sailboat," said Petty Officer 3rd Class Joseph Slaight. "He was upset (that it would be scuttled) and said he was going to miss it."
Unable to fix the sailboat, Van Pham approved its sinking. Crew members torched the Sea Breeze, sinking it in 8,700 feet of water.
"We did it while he was below decks to lessen the blow," Parriott said.
Little House On The Big Sea <|:)~
Glad it didn't end like this:
Collision With Whale Stuns California Fishermen (One Fisherman Dead)
Problem is, he ended up looking like Diana Ross. <|:)~
Actually, the military should hire this guy to talk at some survival school for a while, mostly about keeping the spirits and will to live up. I took 43 days to go solo from Panama to Hawaii (Great El Nino, trade winds gone again, I got it both ways!) and you can get VERY bummed out, and that's on a boat making progress with radios, CDs, books, good food etc.
How this guy kept himself from "going for a swim" during a low point is the real story of this epic to me. He must have had a great source of inner strength, or maybe he "just wouldn't let the sea beat him".
Any way, I salute one tough old SOB.
I was at the marina, this summer, working on engine #2, and about 25 fire trucks showed up. Everybody went running toward the lodge - I poked my head out of the engine deck, thinking, "What the heck?"
Seems a young couple went out on the river in a rowboat, to do some fishing. Net result, two dead kids. Rough water.
I am glad I did not have to see the father carry his dead child to the rescue workers, begging for help.
And I have not mentioned any of this to my wife.
A three-hour tour.... ;~D
I dunno. I have an uncle that could disappear for a few months and nobody would be the wiser. Seems he does it with some frequency. It happens.
Having put in some time out in the wacky Pacific... I don't have a hard time believing this one. The Pacific is a really, really big crick. The parts that are outside of the usual routes for shipping traffic are big chunks of water. You could drift out there for a really long time and not see anybody.
I watched a box of water about halfway between San Diego and Honolulu for 30 days one time... and we didn't even see the other ships that were supposed to be in the neighborhood.
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