View Full Version : Couple Survives 19 Hours Lost on Barrier Reef


Gary H
05-29-2008, 07:09 PM
Link: http://www.happynews.com/news/5262008/missing-divers-rescued-great-barrier-reef.htm

A British diver thought he and his American girlfriend would be eaten alive by sharks as they spent a night floating over Australia's Great Barrier Reef, a newspaper reported Sunday.


Dick Neely, 38, and Alison Dalton, 40, were plucked by a helicopter from the ocean Saturday off the eastern coast after an overnight air search.


The couple tied their wetsuits together and huddled to share body heat during 19 hours adrift in 75-degree waters, Neely told Britain's Sunday Mirror newspaper in a paid interview.


''I truly thought we were going to die. Sharks were on our mind the entire time, but neither of us mentioned the 's' word,'' Neely was quoted as saying.


''We just had to stay positive and calm to help each other through the ordeal and not think about being eaten alive.''


The Sunday Mirror said Neely is from Swaffham, Norfolk, but recently lived on a boat off Phuket, Thailand, where he worked as a diving instructor.


Dalton, his girlfriend of nine months, is a qualified dive master from Sacramento, California, where she runs a bar, it said.


''I think we saved each other's lives,'' Dalton said. ''This terrible experience had definitely brought us closer together.''


The pair became lost Friday afternoon when they resurfaced after diving on a reef and found themselves 200 yards from their chartered dive boat and out of sight of its crew.


A rescue helicopter pilot who winched the couple from the ocean said Sunday they were in good humor when rescued.


''Considering they were out there for 19 hours, they were in very good spirits when they got back,'' David Williams told Australia's Network Seven television. ''They were cracking quite a few jokes about their ordeal.''

threw-er-back
05-30-2008, 08:54 AM
200 yrds............between you and being adrift.......Happy ending..

WonderBoy
05-30-2008, 04:40 PM
200 yrds............between you and being adrift.......Happy ending..

Ya know, I was kinda thinking about that. Was there any current? I would think that if it meant being out there for that long and I couldn't get the attention of the crew, I'd be thinking about ditching the gear and free swimming. I'm not an olympic swimmer by any means, but I think I can make 200 yards pretty quickly. Especially with adrenaline and a slight sense of panic setting in!

Dudro612
05-30-2008, 06:30 PM
I was wondering the same thing it would be nice to know the current conditions. But if it was like 3 knot current it would be really hard to swim.
200 yards is a long way to swim.
They might have been better to go back down providing they had enough air and swim it underwater where the current is usually not quite as strong.

M Diesel
06-19-2008, 03:58 PM
I was wondering the same thing it would be nice to know the current conditions. But if it was like 3 knot current it would be really hard to swim.
200 yards is a long way to swim.
They might have been better to go back down providing they had enough air and swim it underwater where the current is usually not quite as strong.


That's what I would have tried if I had the air. Normally, if I pop up away from the boat, I get a bearing on where it is and drop back under to swim to it instead of doing so on the surface. It's usually an easier swim.