The New Zealand Herald

‘Oh s***, I’m on fire’

Boatie tells of escape from blast

- Chelsea Boyle and Michael Neilson

An Auckland boatie who is slowly recovering after an explosion destroyed his yacht says he is totally shocked by what unfolded. Mike Lawler, 44, said the dark was just setting in when he returned to his boat which was moored off Herald Island.

He had been working on the engine and had just reinstalle­d the battery, he said.

“I turned the lighter on to match the positive and the negative the right way and the boat exploded.”

Most of the boat disappeare­d, leaving Lawler in shock.

“I looked around and I had no roof, no walls on the boat, no cockpit, no dinghy.

“I thought I’d better grab a lifejacket . . . they were gone.”

Everything had blown out, Lawler said.

“What . . . just happened?” he asked himself.

“Okay, oh s***, I’m on fire.” The only option left was to swim in the Waitemata¯ Harbour.

“It wasn’t too far to swim.”

In the water Herald Island resident Michael Reeves was able to help guide him for a short stretch with a paddle board.

Reeves lives on Ferry Parade and told the Herald the explosion had such force it felt like something had hit his house.

After hearing the “intense” explosion he was fearful of what he might find.

“I thought we were going to find 100 pieces of him like the boat,” Reeves said.

Most of Lawler’s possession­s including his wallet and phone went down with his beloved kauri boat.

He had been living on the boat since about October last year, he said.

Lawler said the boat was one of only two and he was not going to be able to get the same design again.

“There goes my boat . . . the worst part is I’m not insured,” Lawler said.

“That’s what p ***** me off the most — you always mean to do it and then something else happens and something else happens.”

Lawler was recovering at his parents’ home and said, while he “was pretty sore”, his clothing which included longs, a jacket and boots had saved him from the brunt of the burns. But he expected his healing face would be covered in sores tomorrow, he said.

“What I don’t understand is: I always turn that gas bottle off before I turn the stove off. I don’t get why it went bang. That’s what I don’t get.”

Lawler, who is a roofer by trade, has spent much of his life on and around boats.

“In summer time, after working you just jump in it and you just go.”

He enjoyed fishing on his boat and joked that while on board it was easy to find oneself thinking: “I think I could work late tomorrow”.

A Givealittl­e page has since been set up for Lawler by Samantha Fels, a family friend. On the page she said the explosion was caused by an LPG leak. She said Lawler’s boat was not insured and he was looking at about $10,000 to remove the wreck from the seabed.

“On top of a long road to recovery and finding somewhere to live, he doesn’t need the stress of trying to pay for the bills headed his way,” she said.

On the day of the explosion a paramedic at the scene said Lawler was lucky to be alive.

Auckland Rescue Helicopter intensive care paramedic Russell Clark told the Herald his crew landed at Whenuapai Airbase shortly before 6.45pm.

Clark said Lawler was conscious when he reached them but had “serious burns” to his face and hands.

The water had helped cool his burns, Clark said.

“With that sort of blast, any sort of explosion, just the sheer forces involved can give you severe traumatic injuries,” he said. “He got off pretty lightly.”

A police spokesman said police were still working alongside fire investigat­ors to establish what happened. Maritime NZ was not investigat­ing but had been in contact with the Auckland Harbourmas­ter.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Mike Lawler is lucky to be alive after his yacht exploded.
Photo / Dean Purcell Mike Lawler is lucky to be alive after his yacht exploded.
 ??  ?? The yacht hours before it blew up.
The yacht hours before it blew up.

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