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| Capt. Kevin Freestone (L) of TowBoatUS Big Pine Key, FL, with US Coast Guard Chief of Search and Rescue, Capt. David McBride (R). Freestone was one of five BoatUS towing captains honored for heroism at the annual BoatUS Towing Services Conference |
With over 600 tow boats spread
across North America, the law of averages dictates that, eventually,
BoatUS towing captains will be thrust into the middle of
life-threatening emergencies. BoatUS Towing Services
recently honored five of its TowBoatUS captains for their heroic
actions with its annual BoatUS "Woody Pollack Lifesaving Awards" at a
ceremony that capped off the group's annual conference held in Tampa FL.
The award is named after the well-respected towboat captain in the
fleet who died at an early age.
"Sometimes the routine of normal day is interrupted by a
life-threatening mayday call or an incident that unfolds in front of
them, and our captains step in without hesitation," said BoatUS Vice
President of Towing Services Jerry Cardarelli. "They are not in the
rescue business, but their actions save others. We are very proud of
them."
US Coast Guard Chief of Search and Rescue, Captain David McBride, who
BoatUS also honored at the ceremony for his years of selfless and
dedicated service to the nation's boaters, presented the awards on
behalf of BoatUS. Here are the details on the incidents:
One late, blustery summer night last year in July, Captain Kevin
Freestone of TowBoatUS Big Pine Key, FL, responded to a mayday call from
a 22-foot vessel with six persons aboard. After communications with the
stricken boat fell ominously silent, Freestone desperately searched and
found the swamped vessel, in which six passengers, standing in the
semi-submersed boat, were precariously trying to balance to keep from
overturning. Freestone took all aboard and safely returned them to shore
and salvaged the vessel.
When a late afternoon thunderstorm rolled in sheets of rain, 30 knots
of wind, lighting and thunder, Captain Lee Eckler of TowBoatUS Tarpon
Springs, FL was stunned at what he saw in the distance through the
tempest: three heads bobbing in the water and an overturned kayak.
Eckler immediately took aboard three girls, age 12 to 16, who only had
one life jacket amongst them, and then safely deposited them and the
kayak ashore at their nearby home. It was likely the luckiest break in
their young lives.
One Friday last April, husband and wife Captains Rodney and Mattie
Suggs of TowBoatUS Clear Lake, TX, raced to the scene of a disabled
sailboat that had reported several persons in the water, but who were
unable to swim back to the vessel as a swift current dragged them
farther away. After finding one person and safely bringing them aboard,
the Suggs' were shocked to learn that six others were still missing.
Searching, the captains soon found the remaining group - all of whom
were severely exhausted, and one who had ingested a large amount of
seawater. His friends said the young man would have soon drowned if it
had not been for the Sugg's fortunate actions.
On a Saturday afternoon Captain Mike Dunn of TowBoatUS Homosassa, FL,
along with the local sheriff, arrived to a chaotic scene in which a
37-foot powerboat had violently overturned, ejecting its nine passengers
into the water. While all had injuries, one 18-year-old was blue, not
breathing, and had an exposed open wound to the head. After loading the
young man aboard with the help of a Good Samaritan nurse and the boy's
mother, Dunn gunned the engines racing for shore while CPR was
performed. At high speed, he then dodged dozens of boats along a narrow,
constricted waterway, all the while making securite calls on the VHF
radio and arranging to rendezvous with EMTs. The teen was life-flighted
to the local hospital - and survived.
Full size photo available by download.