They aren't the most exciting holiday gift, but, it is certainly the most profoundly defined.
Types of PFD (Personal Flotation Device)
December 24, 2015
By Amelia Wade
...Chester Vaenuku (click here) was in his 3.6m tin boat fishing for Christmas dinner in the Mangere Inlet. This year was going to be special because his children, Kaelin, 9, and Benjamin Savage, 10, had flown over from Australia where they lived with their mother.
But the swell increased and water began to spray into the boat, so Mr Vaenuku, 35, decided to pull on his raincoat. It caught on his seat and as he took his hand off the throttle to loosen it a large wave knocked him overboard.
His gumboots sucked him straight to the bottom.
He said his old and tattered but still functional lifejacket pulled him to the surface.
Mr Vaenuku tried to get back in the boat but the motor was still running and it got away from him.
The wind whipped the waves into his face and Mr Vaenuku started praying.
"I called out: 'Please God, help me. Take me back to my children, they came to Australia to spend time with me'," he told the Herald, voice cracking.
"I yelled out and yelled out. I just hoped that something would happen. I prayed and prayed and after about 20 minutes, a boat appeared. It came from nowhere."
Onboard were Justin Robertson and Errol Geange, whom Mr Vaenuku called his "Christmas angels". It took them three tries to haul an exhausted Mr Vaenuku into their boat. They returned him and his dinghy back to shore.
Mr Vaenuku said he wanted to publicly thank Mr Robertson and Mr Geange for saving his family's Christmas.
But Mr Robertson said he was pleased they'd been able to save him.
"We got there in the nick of time. His whole face was drained," Mr Robertson said.
"He was my best catch of the day, that's for sure."...
Types of PFD (Personal Flotation Device)
December 24, 2015
By Amelia Wade
...Chester Vaenuku (click here) was in his 3.6m tin boat fishing for Christmas dinner in the Mangere Inlet. This year was going to be special because his children, Kaelin, 9, and Benjamin Savage, 10, had flown over from Australia where they lived with their mother.
But the swell increased and water began to spray into the boat, so Mr Vaenuku, 35, decided to pull on his raincoat. It caught on his seat and as he took his hand off the throttle to loosen it a large wave knocked him overboard.
His gumboots sucked him straight to the bottom.
He said his old and tattered but still functional lifejacket pulled him to the surface.
Mr Vaenuku tried to get back in the boat but the motor was still running and it got away from him.
The wind whipped the waves into his face and Mr Vaenuku started praying.
"I called out: 'Please God, help me. Take me back to my children, they came to Australia to spend time with me'," he told the Herald, voice cracking.
"I yelled out and yelled out. I just hoped that something would happen. I prayed and prayed and after about 20 minutes, a boat appeared. It came from nowhere."
Onboard were Justin Robertson and Errol Geange, whom Mr Vaenuku called his "Christmas angels". It took them three tries to haul an exhausted Mr Vaenuku into their boat. They returned him and his dinghy back to shore.
Mr Vaenuku said he wanted to publicly thank Mr Robertson and Mr Geange for saving his family's Christmas.
But Mr Robertson said he was pleased they'd been able to save him.
"We got there in the nick of time. His whole face was drained," Mr Robertson said.
"He was my best catch of the day, that's for sure."...