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Multimedia Release: Coast Guard rescues 3 in Makah Bay after mayday call

April 18, 2016

A boater aboard a 21-foot pleasure craft hails the Coast Guard via mayday broadcast before the vessel capsized in Makah Bay, Wash. April 18, 2016.

A 47-foot Motor Life Boat from Coast Guard Station Neah Bay recovered all three people from the water and transported them to emergency medical services personnel waiting at the station.

U.S. Coast Guard audio courtesy of Sector Puget Sound.

An emergency medical responder transports a man with reported symptoms of hypothermia at Coast Guard Station Neah Bay after he was rescued with two friends from a capsized vessel in Makah Bay, Wash., April 18, 2016. All three men were wearing lifejackets when they were rescued by a 47-foot Motor Life Boat crew from Station Neah Bay. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Chief Petty Officer Raymond Anderson.

A Coast Guard MH-65 Dolphin helicopter crew from Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles hovers above a 47-foot Motor Life Boat crew from Coast Guard Station Neah Bay during the rescue of three men whose vessel capsized near Strawberry Rock in Makah Bay, Wash., April 18, 2016.

The MLB crew transported the men to emergency medical services personnel waiting at Station Neah Bay.

U.S. Coast Guard video by Chief Petty Officer Raymond Anderson.

SEATTLE — A Coast Guard boat crew saved three men after their vessel capsized near Strawberry Rock in Makah Bay, Monday. 

A 47-foot Motor Life Boat crew from Coast Guard Station Neah Bay pulled the three men off their overturned vessel and transported them to the station where emergency medical services personnel were waiting to treat the men for reported symptoms of hypothermia. 

The rescue came after watchstanders at Coast Guard Sector Puget Sound received a mayday call from one of the boaters around 10:45 a.m. stating they had an emergency and were in the vicinity of Strawberry Rock. Watchstanders used the information to direct the MLB crew to search coordinates, where they found the three men and the capsized boat. 

"These boaters probably survived because they were wearing lifejackets and had a VHF radio on board to broadcast mayday," said Chief Petty Officer Raymond Anderson, executive petty officer, Station Neah Bay. "Emergency preparation like we saw in today's case is every boater's responsibility." 

The water temperature at the time of the rescue was reportedly 52 degrees.  

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