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Tag: personal watercraft

Boat and personal watercraft collide near Longboat Pass

Boat, personal watercraft collide near Longboat Pass

UPDATED May 3 at 1:20 p.m. – BRADENTON BEACH – While operating a tour boat for Paradise Boat Tours on Sunday, Captain John (Mike) Draayom helped pull a male and a female from the Intracoastal Waterway near Longboat Pass and the Coquina boat ramps.

Draayom said the tour boat was traveling south on the ICW at about 5:45 p.m. when he spotted two people in the water near a boat and a personal watercraft that appeared to be floundering just north of mile marker 47.

Boat and personal watercraft collide near Longboat Pass
Capt. John (Mike) Draayom helped rescue two people from the Intracoastal Waterway. – Sherman Baldwin /Paradise Boat Tours | Submitted

“We came up on two folks in the water and they were in pretty bad shape. We were able to lower our ladder and assist them up onto the vessel. I called 911 and we took them to the closest boat ramp (Coquina South) and waited there for EMS,” Draayom said.

“We were able to pick up the two Jet Skiers and there was a lady in the boat that was injured as well,” he said.

“On Sunday, at approximately 5:30 p.m., the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) received notification from Manatee County Sheriff’s Office of a boating accident near North Coquina Boat Ramp in Manatee County,” FWC Public Information Officer Bryce Phillippi said in a prepared statement. The FWC is the lead agency in the investigation.

Boat and personal watercraft collide near Longboat Pass
Those injured in Sunday’s accident were first taken to the Coquina South boat ramp. – Capt. John Draayom/Paradise Boat Tours | Submitted

“The FWC, MCSO marine unit, Manatee County Fire Rescue and the United States Coast Guard responded to the scene of a two-vessel boating accident involving a 17-foot vessel and a 10-foot personal watercraft. The personal watercraft operator and the vessel passenger received injuries and both individuals were transported to a hospital for treatment. The vessel operator and PWC passenger were uninjured,” according to Phillippi.

“I’m glad we came along when we did because there was a lot of boats going pretty fast through that area at the time,” Draayom said. “The gentleman in the water was struggling pretty hard. If he wasn’t wearing a life vest, he could have been in serious trouble. He walked away. She got transported with rib issues.”

Boat and personal watercraft collide near Longboat Pass
The cowling from the personal watercraft reportedly flew into the boat and struck a passenger. – Capt. John Draayom/Paradise Boat Tours | Submitted

Regarding the female boat passenger who was injured, Draayom said, “From what I’m told, the cowling came off the Jet Ski, went into the boat and hit her.”

The man driving the boat told Draayom that the boat and the personal watercraft collided, he said, adding that he did not know the cause of the collision.

Draayom said he had passengers aboard the tour boat while the events transpired.

“They were just fine. I apologized profusely and they remained seated throughout the whole thing, just watching,” he said.

LifeLines: Boating safety

LifeLines: Boating safety

Please be safe while boating or riding personal watercraft!

Boating tips

  • Wear your life jacket.
  • Attach a Personal Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (PEPIRB) to your life jacket.
  • Take a boating safety course.
  • Get a vessel safety inspection.
  • Install a GPS system.
  • Install a VHS radio – cell phones only work so far offshore.
  • Keep flares on board.
  • In a crisis, stay with the boat.
  • Have enough rope to anchor in rough seas – seven feet for every foot of depth.
  • Tell someone where you’re going and when you’ll be back.
  • Obey speed limits in manatee zones.
  • Stay in designated channels to avoid causing propeller scars in seagrass beds.
  • Don’t drink and boat.

Personal watercraft tips:

  • Life jackets are required whether driving, riding on or being towed behind a personal watercraft.
  • Do not operate a personal watercraft from a half hour after sunset to a half hour before sunrise.
  • Operators must be at least 14 years old.
  • A person must be at least 18 years old to rent a personal watercraft.
  • Operators born on or after Jan. 1, 1988 are required to have completed a National Association of State Boating Law Administrators-approved boating education course and have a boating education ID card and photo ID to operate a vessel with a 10 horsepower motor or higher.

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