Hawke's Bay Today

Kayaker rescues kayaker

Help close at hand when craft starts to take on water off Clifton coast

-

It was a case of everything being shipshape in the end for kayaker Hamish Barclay, who was rescued in a short drama off the Clifton coast in Hawke Bay yesterday. Everything that is, except for the crack in his plastic hull, but the Otaki man said it’s fixable, and it won’t be long before he’s back on the water.

It was essentiall­y a lining-up of the stars in the right order as he realised the kayak was taking on water soon after putting to sea for an earlyafter­noon paddle.

“It started getting a bit wobbly, I hopped off, it had a crack, and it was filling-up rapidly.”

As he clung to the 100kg craft and waved his tethered paddle in the air his plight was noticed by wife Judy, who alerted police.

Parked nearby, Otaki kayaking instructor Wayne Putt also noticed the predicamen­t and solicited the help of Coromandel traveller Peter Jessup, who had two kayaks atop his motorhome, and a rescue mission was soon launched from the beach.

The pair reached Barclay less than a kilometre from the beach, Putt taking the stricken kayak in tow using its paddle and leash, with Barclay, wearing a lifejacket, clinging to the kayak paddled by Jessup as they headed back to the shore.

Putt said he had seen Barclay “go out” and made his move when he realised the kayaker was in the water and waving the paddle.

Barclay said he’d had the kayak several years, and hadn’t been aware of the crack in the hull he last used several weeks ago off Ngawi, on the South Wairarapa coast.

The rescuers said Barclay had done all the right things, having the paddle tethered, having a lifejacket, and sticking with the kayak rather than climbing back aboard.

Jessup said that when he was told of the predicamen­t it became a question of whether he and Putt would go out, or await “the Coastguard” which had also been alerted.

Conditions were described as like a millpond, and all involved in the rescue reckoned that Barclay would likely have drifted back ashore — somewhere — if help had not been so near at hand.

“It could have been worse,” said Barclay.

 ?? Photo / Paul Taylor ??
Photo / Paul Taylor
 ?? Photo / Paul Taylor ?? Rescued man Hamish Barclay and his stricken kayak arrive back on dry land at Clifton Reserve after the rescue.
Photo / Paul Taylor Rescued man Hamish Barclay and his stricken kayak arrive back on dry land at Clifton Reserve after the rescue.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand