'Severely hypothermic' sailor rescued after spending hours adrift off B.C. coast
A sailboat captain was found alive but suffering from a severe case of hypothermia on Monday after spending up to five hours adrift in the ocean off British Columbia, according to the coast guard.
Rescue co-ordinators in Victoria dispatched a military C-130 Hercules search plane and a CH-149 Cormorant rescue helicopter after a 13-metre sailboat was found abandoned on the rocks on Cortes Island, northwest of Powell River.
Multiple coast guard vessels were also sent to the area, including an inshore rescue boat whose crew searched the stranded sailboat and determined it had been occupied earlier in the day, according to Canadian Coast Guard spokesperson Kiri Westnedge.
One of the coast guard vessel crews eventually spotted the missing sailor, who was wearing a yellow lifejacket and floating in the channel between Cortes Island and Hernando Island to the south.
"The person had been in the water for approximately four to five hours and was severely hypothermic," Westnedge said in an emailed statement Tuesday.
"The crew of the lifeboat were able to get the person on board and provide first aid while transporting the person to emergency health services" in Lund, on the B.C. mainland, she said.
"Without the yellow lifejacket, it is unlikely that responders would have been able to find the missing captain and save his life," the coast guard spokesperson added.
Authorities are reminding boaters to always maintain proper safety equipment and wear flotation devices when on the water.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
2 dead, third in critical condition after attack in Kingston, Ont., suspect arrested
Two people are dead and a third suffered life-threatening injuries following an attack at an encampment in Kingston, Ont. Thursday. A suspect has been arrested following a multi-hour standoff.
B.C. will scrap carbon tax if feds remove requirement: Eby
British Columbia’s premier says the province will end the consumer carbon tax if the federal government removes the legal requirement to have one.
Trump rules out another debate against Harris as her campaign announces US$47M haul in hours afterward
Donald Trump on Thursday ruled out another presidential debate against Kamala Harris as her campaign announced a massive fundraising haul in the hours after the two candidates met on stage.
TIFF pauses screenings of documentary about Russian soldiers due to 'significant threats'
The Toronto Film Festival says it has been forced to pause the screenings of a documentary about Russian soldiers this weekend, citing 'significant threats to festival operations and public safety.'
'Keep your bags packed': Consul general grilled over $9M NYC condo purchase
After weeks of pressure, Canada's consul general Tom Clark is testifying on Thursday before a House of Commons committee about the purchase of his new official residence in New York that generated a lot of political attention over the summer.
Georgia judge dismisses two criminal counts against Trump, court filing shows
A Georgia judge on Thursday dismissed two criminal counts in the U.S. state's 2020 election interference case against Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and one other count against allies of the former president.
Family of Sikh man speaks out against Toronto-area hospital after beard shaved
The family of a Sikh man from Brampton is seeking an apology, an explanation, and a promise to do better from the local hospital network after they say the facial hair of their loved one was removed without their consent.
This Italian lawyer says he thought he was buying a regular print of Churchill, not the 'mythical' stolen portrait
When Nicola Cassinelli, Italian lawyer and occasional art collector, bid on a portrait of the late U.K. prime minister Winston Churchill, he says, he didn't know it would land him in the centre of an international criminal investigation.
NEW N.B. premier’s asylum seeker comments spark controversy
Claims from New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs that Ottawa wants to force the province to take in 4,600 asylum seekers are "largely fictitious," says federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller.