Marshall Islands castaway details fishing trip gone awry

Courtesy Tony de Brum

A man, center, washed up on the shore of the Marshall Islands claiming that he spent 16 months lost at sea.

By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

The man who washed up on the Marshall Islands in the Pacific with a tale of being lost at sea for more than a year told authorities that he left Mexico on a fishing trip, was blown off course after his engine died and watched his traveling companion starve to death.

The castaway, who identified himself as Jose Salvador Alvarenga, was questioned Monday by police and told them an incredible story : He drifted 6,000 miles in a 24-foot boat, surviving on fish, birds, turtles, rainwater, urine -- and prayers.

Officials said they have not yet confirmed his account. The man could not recall his own birth date, provided some conflicting information about when he left Mexico, and could not explain why there was no fishing gear on the battered vessel.

"He is not fully coherent," Tony de Brum, minister-in-assistance to the president of the republic, a cluster of atolls and islands northeast of Australia.

"He is hungry, swollen, in pain, extremely loopy and wants a haircut," an interpreter who helped interview Alvarenga on Monday wrote in a report.

Despite his fragile state, the man was able to give officials new details of his life, including his birthplace in El Salvador, the name of his mother, the Mexican fishing company where he worked, and the city where he lived.

He told them he took to the sea on Sept. 21, 2012 -- although he said described that as a Saturday when it would have been a Friday -- with a teenager named Ezekiel.

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Marshall Islands castaway details fishing trip gone awry

What’s Your Mojo? – Ep. 4: Fictional Islands, 4th Wall Breaks, Beastie Boys Songs – Video


What #39;s Your Mojo? - Ep. 4: Fictional Islands, 4th Wall Breaks, Beastie Boys Songs
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Discovering the beauty of the Camotes Islands by accident

by Dindin Reyes Posted on 02/01/2014 3:47 AM |Updated 02/01/2014 12:59 PM

DISCOVER CAMOTES. A small group of islands in the Visayan sea, the Camotes islands are ripe for discovering.

MANILA, Philippines The words below are the writers account of how post-Sinulog plans gone wrong led to the accidental discovery of a hidden island paradise.

Its 7:30 am, the morning after Sinulog and Im completely alone.

By some miscommunication with my friends, I woke up at the hostel completely alone, except for some hostel roommates I had met only the day before.

One thing I did not have: an itinerary.

In this state of flux, I somehow managed to get an invitation to visit the Camotes islands from one of my hostel roommates. With absolutely no idea where it was in Cebu, how long it would take, and what I would see there, I responded with a resounding yes.

It ended up being one of the highlights of my entire trip, though it was not without its share of hurdles, bad weather being one of them.

Here are a few of my takeaways that you might find useful:

1. The middle of nowhere is not that far

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Discovering the beauty of the Camotes Islands by accident

Total blackout in Dinagat, Siargao Islands due to ‘Basyang’

Tropical storm Basyang placed the province of Dinagat Islands and Siargao Islands into total darkness.

According to Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction Management Councils (PDDRMCs) of Dinagat Islands and Surigao del Norte, typhoon Basyang toppled down several trees and some electric posts when the storm struck at 6 p.m. in Siargao Island and 7:45 p.m. at Dinagat Islands on Friday.

Dinagat Provincial Information Officer Jane Mayola said 1,220 families or nearly 3,000 people were evacuated from coastal areas before the storm hit the province after Governor Glenda Ecleo ordered forced evacuation especially in high risk areas.

She said engineers and technical men of Dinagat Islands and Siargao Islands Electric Cooperative Inc. were already instructed by General Manager Sergio Dagooc to redouble their effort in restoring the power in the four most affected towns of the province.

As requested by Surigao del Norte Governor Sol F. Matugas, the general manager of the electric cooperative also ordered the immediate restoration of all tourism areas in Siargao Islands where many foreign tourists are housed in several resorts, hotels and inn.

At least 500 families or nearly 1,800 people were also evacuated.

An estimated 2,000 families in the mainland municipalities of Surigao del Norte were also brought by the PDRRMC rescue teams to various evacuation centers before typhoon Basyang struck the province.

Our people are safe and no recorded casualty when Basyang left our province, said Matugas, as she instructed the provinces social welfare office to continue extending assistance to evacuees.

The Surigao City CDRRMC chaired by Mayor Ernesto T. Matugas also reported on Saturday that 778 families or 1,115 people are temporarily sheltered at various evacuation centers in the city before Basyang hit the city early Friday night.

On the other hand, the PDRRMC in Surigao del Sur chaired by Gov. Johnny T. Pimentel, also reported that nearly 3,000 families in the whole province, particularly in the cities of Tandag and Bislig and Hinatuan town were already evacuated to various evacuation centers before Basyang landed in Siargao.

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Total blackout in Dinagat, Siargao Islands due to ‘Basyang’

Man washes up in Marshall Islands

An emaciated man whose boat washed up on a remote Pacific atoll this week claims he survived 16 months adrift on the Pacific, floating more than 12,500 kilometres from Mexico, a researcher says.

The man, with a long beard and hair, was discovered on Thursday when his 7.32-metre fibreglass boat with propellerless engines floated onto the reef at Ebon Atoll in the Marshall Islands and he was spotted by two locals.

'His condition isn't good, but he's getting better,' Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology student doing research on Ebon, said by telephone.

Fjeldstad said the man, dressed only in a pair of ragged underpants, claims he left Mexico for El Salvador in September 2012 with a companion, who died at sea several months ago.

Details of his survival are sketchy, Fjeldstad added, as the man only speaks Spanish, but he said his name was Jose Ivan.

'The boat is really scratched up and looks like it has been in the water for a long time,' said the researcher.

'He has a long beard and hair.'

Ivan indicated to Fjeldstad that he survived by eating turtles, birds and fish and drinking turtle blood when there was no rain.

No fishing gear was on the boat and Ivan suggested he caught turtles and birds with his bare hands.

There was a turtle on the boat when it landed at Ebon.

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Man washes up in Marshall Islands

Public asked to look out for young hammerhead shark

People fishing in the Bay of Islands are being asked to keep a look out for a young hammerhead shark, nicknamed Orokawa.

Orokawa is providing scientists with information on his whereabouts after becoming the first electronically tagged hammerhead to provide useful data in New Zealand waters.

The young shark, just 137cm long, was tagged last Sunday near Deep Water Cove in the Bay of Islands by fisherman Scott Tindale.

"We were anchored within casting distance of the rocks and saw a hammerhead swimming towards us on the surface," Mr Tindale said.

"I cast a bait towards him and he took it straight away. Because he was small we were able to get him in the boat, oxygenate his gills with seawater from a deck hose, and tag and release him within five minutes."

NIWA shark expert Dr Malcolm Francis has been contracted by the Ministry for Primary Industries to find out more about the biology, behaviour and stock status of hammerhead sharks in a bid to determine whether they are threatened by overfishing.

Dr Francis and Mr Tindale plan to tag a number of hammerheads - recognisable by their bizarre head shape - in the coming year to determine whether they are resident or migratory and what they do.

Little is known about the species, its habitat or abundance in New Zealand and Dr Francis says the young hammerheads are vulnerable to capture by set nets, longlines and trawls.

"They seem to be very sensitive to capture and most of them die before they can be ret

urned to the sea."

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Public asked to look out for young hammerhead shark