The Independent on Saturday

When in trouble ... just ask for HELP

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SOMETIMES all you have to do is ask for “HELP”: That’s what three men stranded on a deserted Pacific island learned earlier this week, writing the message in palm fronds which were spotted by US rescuers.

The trio, all experience­d mariners in their forties, became stranded on a lonely island after setting off from Micronesia’s Polowat Atoll on March 31 in their motor-powered skiff which subsequent­ly experience­d damage.

They were reported missing last Saturday by a woman who told the US Coast Guard her three uncles never returned from Pikelot Atoll, a tiny island in the remote Western Pacific, about 100 nautical miles away.

“The mariners spelled out ‘HELP’ on the beach using palm leaves, a crucial factor in their discovery,” said search and rescue mission co-ordinator Lieutenant Chelsea Garcia.

She reported that the trio were discovered on Sunday on Pikelot Atoll by a US Navy aircraft.

“This act of ingenuity was pivotal in guiding rescue efforts directly to their location,” she said.

The aircraft crew dropped survival packages, and one day later rescuers dropped a radio which the mariners used to communicat­e that they were in good health, had access to food and water, and that the motor on their 6m skiff was no longer working.

On Tuesday morning a ship rescued the trio and their equipment, returning them to Polowat Atoll, the Coast

Guard said.

In August 2020, three Micronesia­n sailors also stranded on Pikelot were rescued after Australian and US warplanes spotted a giant “SOS” they had scrawled on the beach. |

 ?? US COAST GUARD ?? AN IMAGE released by the US Coast Guard on Thursday shows a ‘Help’ sign on the beach made with palm leaves by three mariners stranded on Pikelot Atoll, Yap State, Micronesia. The sign guided rescue teams to them. | AFP
US COAST GUARD AN IMAGE released by the US Coast Guard on Thursday shows a ‘Help’ sign on the beach made with palm leaves by three mariners stranded on Pikelot Atoll, Yap State, Micronesia. The sign guided rescue teams to them. | AFP

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