Stab Magazine | Missing South-African surfer found in the Mentawais

Live Now — The Season Finale Of The Electric Acid Surfboard Test With Dave Rastovich

454 Views

Missing South-African surfer found in the Mentawais

After falling overboard and floating on his back in the Mentawais for 27 hours, South African surfer Brett Archibald has been found alive. Brett was part of a group making their seventh trip across the 90 mile straight between Padang and the Mentawais, which can take between 10 and 14 hours. He was travelling on the Naga Laut, having left Padang Port at 6pm. The 10 passengers and seven crew ate and retired to their cabins. Brett was last seen around 4:30am by another passenger, but when everyone came up to the gallery for breakfast at 8am, Brett was no longer on board. The boat immediately spun around to retrace its steps. “Brett was very seasick last night during the storm,” said JM Tostee, who was onboard the Naga Laut. “We think he must have fallen overboard when getting sick on deck whilst everyone was sleeping.” “Archie is strong enough mentally and physically to survive.” The boat that found brett – The Barrenjoey, sailing under Captain Doris. Many other private surf charter boats in the area immediately rushed to help search, led by The Barrenjoey, owned by John McGroder and sailing under Captain Doris, and the three Trader boats, under Martin Daily. The Indonesian Federal Search and Rescue Basarmas also coordinated a search and rescue with local Indonesian authorities and coast guard. The current was running west which meant that John would be headed for Sipora Island. There was a lot of debris in the water (tree trunks), and the sun had risen shortly after he’d fallen. The charter boats searched all night with bright lights on in the areas they’d calculated Brett to be, based on current and winds. And after 27 hours floating on his back in a stormy ocean, Brett has been found alive 12 miles off the east coast of Sipora. He was found by Captain Doris, who was sailing the Barrenjoey, 10 miles from where he’d fallen overboard. “Brett Archibald has boarded the Barenjoey 20 mins ago,” wrote All Aboard Travel on their Facebook. “He is alive. A bit sunburnt and dehydrated. He was floating alone.” Brett’s wife, Anita, received an SMS as 1:30am South-African time that read: “barrenjoey mcgroder. And barrenjoey surf charters. John, Belinda and crew Doris and their two sons Finn and Duke (5 + 8 years old) – who also had their binoculars out as well – found Brett.” Anita then spoke to her husband for the first time (over the phone) at 4:15am South African time. According to an update from Craig Lambinon, who works in Sea Rescue Communications for the National Sea Rescue Institute: “Brett told (Anita) he’d been extremely sea sick and may have passed out on the deck of Naga Laut while being sea-sick overboard when he woke up already in the sea behind the boat which continued away from him. No one onboard Naga Laut knew he had gone overboard.” “He said he came close to drowning at least eight times during his 27 hour ordeal (swimming and drifting at sea) and that he had been stung by jelly fish, picked at by fish and seagulls had tried to pluck his eyes out.” “He has highly complimented his rescuers on Barrenjoey.” “He is in good spirits.” And, the biggest kicker of all? “Brett told Anita he wants to complete his surfing trip before returning home and that he didnt fly all that way to tread water for 27 hours.” Brett is now being moved back to Naga Laut and his charter buddies, who will take him to Padang. Brett giving friend Anthony Singleton a head shave before the Naga Laut pulled out of Padang Harbour – at this point, expecting two weeks of sun, surf, fishing and good times with school pals. Photo: Jean-Marc Tostee, from Facebook.

news // Mar 8, 2016
Words by stab
Reading Time: 3 minutes

After falling overboard and floating on his back in the Mentawais for 27 hours, South African surfer Brett Archibald has been found alive.

Brett was part of a group making their seventh trip across the 90 mile straight between Padang and the Mentawais, which can take between 10 and 14 hours. He was travelling on the Naga Laut, having left Padang Port at 6pm. The 10 passengers and seven crew ate and retired to their cabins. Brett was last seen around 4:30am by another passenger, but when everyone came up to the gallery for breakfast at 8am, Brett was no longer on board. The boat immediately spun around to retrace its steps.

“Brett was very seasick last night during the storm,” said JM Tostee, who was onboard the Naga Laut. “We think he must have fallen overboard when getting sick on deck whilst everyone was sleeping.”

“Archie is strong enough mentally and physically to survive.”

The boat that found brett – The Barrenjoey, sailing under Captain Doris.

The boat that found brett – The Barrenjoey, sailing under Captain Doris.

Many other private surf charter boats in the area immediately rushed to help search, led by The Barrenjoey, owned by John McGroder and sailing under Captain Doris, and the three Trader boats, under Martin Daily. The Indonesian Federal Search and Rescue Basarmas also coordinated a search and rescue with local Indonesian authorities and coast guard.

The current was running west which meant that John would be headed for Sipora Island. There was a lot of debris in the water (tree trunks), and the sun had risen shortly after he’d fallen. The charter boats searched all night with bright lights on in the areas they’d calculated Brett to be, based on current and winds.

And after 27 hours floating on his back in a stormy ocean, Brett has been found alive 12 miles off the east coast of Sipora. He was found by Captain Doris, who was sailing the Barrenjoey, 10 miles from where he’d fallen overboard.

“Brett Archibald has boarded the Barenjoey 20 mins ago,” wrote All Aboard Travel on their Facebook. “He is alive. A bit sunburnt and dehydrated. He was floating alone.”

Brett’s wife, Anita, received an SMS as 1:30am South-African time that read: “barrenjoey mcgroder. And barrenjoey surf charters. John, Belinda and crew Doris and their two sons Finn and Duke (5 + 8 years old) – who also had their binoculars out as well – found Brett.” Anita then spoke to her husband for the first time (over the phone) at 4:15am South African time.

According to an update from Craig Lambinon, who works in Sea Rescue Communications for the National Sea Rescue Institute: “Brett told (Anita) he’d been extremely sea sick and may have passed out on the deck of Naga Laut while being sea-sick overboard when he woke up already in the sea behind the boat which continued away from him. No one onboard Naga Laut knew he had gone overboard.”

“He said he came close to drowning at least eight times during his 27 hour ordeal (swimming and drifting at sea) and that he had been stung by jelly fish, picked at by fish and seagulls had tried to pluck his eyes out.”

“He has highly complimented his rescuers on Barrenjoey.”

“He is in good spirits.”

And, the biggest kicker of all? “Brett told Anita he wants to complete his surfing trip before returning home and that he didnt fly all that way to tread water for 27 hours.”

Brett is now being moved back to Naga Laut and his charter buddies, who will take him to Padang.

Brett giving friend Anthony Singleton a head shave as the Naga Laut pulled out of Padang Harbour – at this point, expecting two weeks of sun, surf, fishing and good times with school mates. Photo: Jean-Marc Tostee, from Facebook.

Brett giving friend Anthony Singleton a head shave before the Naga Laut pulled out of Padang Harbour – at this point, expecting two weeks of sun, surf, fishing and good times with school pals. Photo: Jean-Marc Tostee, from Facebook.

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

Stab Edit of the Year: Erwin Bliss In ‘Dipsychia’

"Nothing about those stupid influencers inspire me. They know fuck all about life."

Dec 2, 2024

Red Bull No Contest Wanders Waikiki + Crossteps Along Oahu’s South Shore

Exploring the 300,000 strong, 177.2 square mile surf cultural hub of Honolulu.

Dec 1, 2024

“We Locked Eyes For A Second, And I Was Like, ‘Here we go again’”

JOB recounts his 20-year anniversary double-barrel with Mike Stewart

Nov 30, 2024

Stab Interview: Raimana Van Bastolaer Explains His Unparalleled Surfing Career Path

From turning pro in one month, to jetskis over his head, to becoming a surf…

Nov 30, 2024

Watch: The ‘North Stars’ That Guide Adrien Toyon

A Film of the Year nominee from Yentl Touboul.

Nov 29, 2024

Watch: Dave Rastovich On Narcissistic Surf Culture, Gimmicky Designs + the Future of Flax

Featuring Darren Handley, NPJ, Ryan Lovelace, and Corey Graham at the Electric Acid Surfboard Test…

Nov 28, 2024

SEOTY: Jerome Forrest In ‘A Forrest From The Trees’

This full-time roof plumber edits his own surf sections.

Nov 27, 2024

Dane Reynolds Opens New And Improved Chapter 11 Shop

Just a stone's throw from their previous Ventura habitation. 

Nov 27, 2024

The Backstory: Nic von Rupp Collides With First-Time Nazaré Paddler

"Only those out there know what the jungle really looks like."

Nov 26, 2024

Australian Freesurfers Start An Eyewear Cult, JJF Gets New Wheels, Two CT Surfers Sign With An LA Design Studio, Lost + CI Bank More Female Talent

Can cults, cars and/or consumer electronics save surfing's bottom line?

Nov 26, 2024

Watch: Wavegarden Just Reinvented Its Demo Center 

Thereby enabling 7-second barrels and a variety of moon shots.

Nov 25, 2024

“Imagine A Mirror Of J-Bay Combined With A Reversed Gold Coast And Mini Skeleton Bay”

A Portrait of Liberia starring Brendon Gibbens, Eli Beukes + William Allioti.

Nov 25, 2024

(No) Empty Set: The Surf Cam Effect

Matt Biolos, Luke Cederman, Surfline and more explain how cams have affected world-class waves.

Nov 23, 2024

Near Drownings, Camel Milk, And Mass Puking: The Making Of Motel Hell

“I’ve never felt more alive, or closer to death, while working on a project”

Nov 23, 2024

Mick Fanning Buys Into Gold Coast’s $300 Million Wavepool, Coming 2027

Your throne’s shaking, Superbank.

Nov 22, 2024

The Unsavory Side Of “Surf City”, El Salvador

In a bid to grow tourism, the "world's coolest dictator" is sparing no expense —…

Nov 22, 2024

The Stab Interview: EAST-Winning Shaper Ryan Lovelace

On shaping alchemy, parabolic stringers, boat building + Rasta's clairvoyance. 

Nov 21, 2024

Surfers Oppose New Seawall At San Francisco’s Ocean Beach

"As a surfer, I'm opposed to it. As a scientist, I'm opposed to it."

Nov 19, 2024
Advertisement