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RNLI urges fishing community to learn safety training following skipper rescue

Fri, 07 Feb 2020

The skipper 'Polaris' which sank off the West coast in November 2019 - credit: RNLI
The skipper 'Polaris' which sank off the West coast in November 2019 - credit: RNLI

An RNLI Fishing Safety Manager is urging the fishing community to take-up safety training that is on offer for their crews and to ensure that their safety equipment is up to date following a dramatic rescue.

 

It comes after the skipper of a fishing vessel that sank late last year off the Isle of Man has attributed their rescue to the safety training the crew had undertaken previously and to their lifejackets, which were fitted with personal locator beacons. 

 

On the evening of 23rd November last year, the fishing vessel Polaris suffered a catastrophic hull failure off the west coast.

 

The vessel sank so rapidly that the skipper only had time to send out a Mayday to the coastguard and other surrounding fishing boats before the vessel became submerged.

 

The coastguard immediately launched two RNLI lifeboats from Port St Mary and Port Erin and a Rescue Helicopter, but it was a local fishing vessel, Lynn Marie, which arrived first on the scene.

 

The skipper and a crewmember from Polaris had been in the water for at least 15-20 mins before help arrived.

 

The Lynn Marie crew located them with a searchlight and recovered them from the water.

 

Commenting on the rescue RNLI Fishing Safety Manager Frankie Horne said: ‘After speaking with Gordon Mills, the skipper of the Polaris, and the crew of Lynn Marie on their arrival at Peel, it was quite clear that this could have been a very different story had the crew of both vessels not acted so professionally. The crew had attended safety training and wore lifejackets fitted with Personal Locator Beacons which had increased their chances of survival.’

 

Gordon Mills, Skipper of Polaris said: ‘To see fishermen struggling in a controlled environment and only lasting a few minutes or in some cases a few seconds without the lifejacket makes you think about your own safety. 

 

'I can tell you that there is no doubt that the lifejackets saved our lives. We wouldn’t have even been afloat for the crew of Fishing Vessel Lynn Marie to recover us from the water had we not been wearing them. I would encourage all fishermen to start wearing their lifejackets while on deck, you just never know when you might need it.’

 

For advice on RNLI Fishing Safety visit https://rnli.org/safety/choose-your-activity/commercial-fishing.


 

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