Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap 'HELP' sign on beach points Navy and Coast Guard aviators to men stuck on Pacific atoll !

'HELP' sign on beach points Navy and Coast Guard aviators to men stuck on Pacific atoll

Time:2024-05-21 06:26:13 source:Earthly Edition news portal

Three men stranded on an uninhabited Pacific island survived for more than a week and used palm fronds to spell out HELP on the beach – leading to rescue by Navy and Coast Guard aviators who spotted the sign from several thousand feet in the air.

They had embarked March 31 in a 20-foot boat with an outboard motor from Pulawat Atoll, a small island with about an estimated 1,000 inhabitants in the Federated States of Micronesia about 1,800 miles (3,000 kilometers) east of the Philippines.

The men were fishing when they hit a coral reef, putting a hole in the boat’s bottom and causing it to take on water, Lt. Keith Arnold said in a Coast Guard video.

A Coast Guard ship, the Oliver Henry, picked up the men Tuesday and took them back to the atoll where they had set out nine days earlier and 100 miles (160 kilometers) away, according to the statement.

Related information
  • Kristin Cavallari, 37, ignores critics of her age
  • Poland's Tusk calls secret services meeting after defection of judge to Belarus
  • Wisconsin Republicans launch audit of state government diversity efforts
  • North Macedonia elections: What is at stake? Who are contesting? All you need to know
  • Siblings trying to make US water polo teams for Paris Olympics
  • Rachel Reeves hints Labour's 'anti
  • Worker killed, another injured, when truck crashes through guardrail along California freeway
  • Mississippi ex
Recommended content
  • Mohammad Mokhber: Who is Iran’s acting president?
  • Rep. Greene and Speaker Johnson meet for a second day as possible vote on his ouster simmers
  • Kylie Jenner wears bullet
  • Analysis: Brooks Koepka has a big game. He doesn't need a lot of words
  • Yvette Fielding says her Most Haunted co
  • Rachel Reeves hints Labour's 'anti