Texarkana Gazette

Rescued boater spent week adrift on raft

- By Denise Lavoie and Jennifer McDermott

BOSTON—A Vermont man whose boat sank spent seven days adrift on an inflatable life raft before he was rescued off the coast of Massachuse­tts by a passing freighter, but his still-missing mother was presumed dead, the Coast Guard said Monday.

The Coast Guard had suspended its search Friday for Linda Carman, 54, and her 22-year-old son, Nathan Carman. The mother and son disappeare­d Sept. 18 after leaving a Rhode Island marina to go on a fishing trip in Nathan Carman’s 31-foot aluminum boat named the Chicken Pox.

Nathan Carman was found Sunday by a freighter about 100 nautical miles south of Martha’s Vineyard, the Coast Guard said. He was listed in good condition.

Aboard the freighter, he spoke by phone to a Coast Guard command center in Boston. Petty Officer 3rd Class Nicole Groll, a Coast Guard spokeswoma­n, said Nathan Carman told the Coast Guard that when the boat started to sink, it went down quickly.

“He looked for his mother and did not see her. He had some food and water, and he jumped into the life raft, and that was it,” Groll told The Associated Press.

Groll said the Coast Guard did not receive a distress call when the boat began taking on water. She said it is unclear whether the boat was equipped with a radio, but said recreation­al boaters are urged to carry a radio and a waterproof case.

The freighter was expected to arrive in Boston Tuesday morning.

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