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P.E.I. boat rescues New Brunswick herring boat crew

Peter Augustine and his girlfriend, Chantel Beveau, check out the life raft where he and his two-man crew waited for rescue Friday morning.   TC Media photo by Eric McCarthy

Peter Augustine and his girlfriend, Chantel Beveau, check out the life raft where he and his two-man crew waited for rescue Friday morning.

Published on September 14, 2012
Published on September 14, 2012
Eric McCarthy  RSS Feed

The fishing boat, Miss Tornado, sinks in 127 feet of water off the western end of the Island.

Topics :
Coast Guard , Tim Hortons , RCMP , New Brunswick , North Cape , Tignish

SKINNERS POND - The message Chantel Bezeau got when she answered her phone at 2:56 a.m. Friday startled her.

On the other end of the line was her boyfriend, Peter Augustine, and he was telling her his fishing boat was sinking.

Bezeau said she sensed something was wrong even before she heard Augusine's voice.

"When I looked at my phone, I said, 'wow, there's something going on.'"

Augustine, who had just arrived at North Cape after a three hour sail from Pointe Sapin, New Brunswick and hadn't yet taken on any herring, said a hose that pumps water through his engine to keep it cool broke off and caused his eight year-old fiberglass vessel to quickly take on water.

"By the time I got to the engine room the water was four feet and I couldn't do anything with that," Augistine said.

"I gave my girlfriend a call and I told her the boat is sinking and there's no way I can stop it, because the water is coming in like crazy."

While she had him on the line, Bezeau could hear Augustine, the captain of the Miss Tornado, give his coordinates to Coast Guard.

"I was asking if they were alright and he said, 'Yes, we're alright.' Next thing he had to go."

Another hour would pass before Bezeau would hear from him again. By then Augustine and his two-man crew were safely aboard Young Guns, a herring boat out of Tignish, captained by Alden Gaudet.

"I knew they had the (survival) raft, but the worst thing comes to your mind when something like that happens," she said.

Bezeau left her Miscou Island, New Brunswick home around 4 a.m. Friday and met up with Augustine and his crew at Tim Hortons at O'Leary Corner around 9 a.m.

RCMP officers who had helped coordinate the rescue, had driven them there for breakfast.

Augustine said he shot off a flare when he gave Coast Guard his coordinates. He could see fishing boats searching for them about a mile off and sent out another flare.

That's when Gaudet first caught sight of a flare and went full-throttle in their direction, arriving first on the scene.

"I gave my girlfriend a call and I told her the boat is sinking and there's no way I can stop it, because the water is coming in like crazy," - Peter Augustine

Gaudet said the boat was level with the water when he arrived. He and his helper, Alex Tremblay, pulled the life raft away from the sinking boat before helping the men aboard. A short time later the Miss Tornado went down stern-first, leaving about two meters of the bow sticking out of the water.

To mark the spot, Gaudet said they tied a buoy with about 200 feet of rope to the stranded vessel before taking the crew to shore. His depth sounder indicated there was 127 feet of water at that location.

Augustine, who fishes snow crab and herring, said his boat is insured. He hopes to have his boat repaired or replaced by next fishing season.

"You can't replace a life, but you can replace a boat," Bezeau said.

 

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Comments

  • Username
    SHELLIE
    - September 15, 2012 at 12:31:20

    That's right a Boat can be replaced but the lives of the Crew cannot be. In addition to the Life Raft, did the Crew of This Fishing Boat are the CREW of This Fishing Boat ALSO have to have Survival Suits? These men were very fortunate to have helped to have been saved by The Crew of THE YOUNG GUNS out of Tignish, P.E.I !

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  • Username
    John
    - September 15, 2012 at 10:39:47

    Glad they are ok. In the old days the wooden boats would never sink. They would swamp and wash over but turned into a raft that floated. Never liked fiberglass because they go down like a stone once water gets in.

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