We were surfing big waves at an isolated deep water reef when my surfboard leash was snapped by a huge wave. Stranded in a dangerous position, I waved for my jetski safety driver to pick me up. But, instead of rescuing me, I watched in horror as he was knocked off his ski by a wall of whitewater. Now there were two of us in trouble. The third member of our crew (who still had his surfboard) made a mad paddle for the jetski as it teetered precipitously in the impact zone. But just as he was getting near, he too had his leash snapped as a wave rolled over him, tossing our ski even farther into the soup. Now all three of us needed rescuing. We were the only ones out there that day and were now floundering in an area known for its great white shark population. Our situation was dire. What followed was a long swim to recover our craft, then a frantic search to find my friends. By the time I did, Fabian had pulled a huge raft of bull kelp around himself in a comical bid to break up his outline against the sharks below. Our driver Tom, was red faced and apologising profusely. The rescue sled attached to the back of the ski had been snapped in half. We limped back to the harbour with our tails between our legs, knowing we were lucky that it hadn’t been worse.
This was to be the first of five incidents during which four good friends of mine, came close to dying. By the fifth rescue, I was experiencing PTSD symptoms, meaning that surfing had taken on a whole different slant. After years of throwing myself down saltwater mine shafts with little regard for the consequences, I was now constantly thinking...
"Who’s going to rescue me when I’m in trouble?"
As it was, I had been relying on training that I had gotten as a Boy Scout twenty-five years earlier. My first responder skill set was limited at best and I seriously doubted that some of my crew had any life saving skills at all...