0:43
Mexican sailor survives 16 months adrift on the Pacific Ocean by catching turtles and birds..
Mexican sailor survives 16 months adrift on the Pacific Ocean by catching turtles and bird...
published: 01 Feb 2014
Mexican sailor survives 16 months adrift on the Pacific Ocean by catching turtles and birds..
Mexican sailor survives 16 months adrift on the Pacific Ocean by catching turtles and birds..
Mexican sailor survives 16 months adrift on the Pacific Ocean by catching turtles and birds with his bare hands and drinking their blood before washing up 8,000 miles away A shipwrecked sailor who had been adrift in the Pacific for 16 months has told rescuers he drank turtles' blood and ate seabirds to survive. Jose Ivan and his battered 24ft fibreglass boat with propellerless engines washed ashore on a remote coral atoll this week. He says that after the engine cut out in September 2012, he drifted more than 8,000 miles from his home in Mexico to Ebon Atoll. When he was spotted stranded on a reef by locals, he was long-haired, emaciated and dressed only in ragged underpants. The Mexican told rescuers he had left his homeland for El Salvador with a companion, who had died at sea several months ago.- published: 01 Feb 2014
- views: 24
2:03
Real Castaway Survival Story 16 mos in Pacific Ocean a grim story of loss and determination
Real Castaway Survival Story 16 mos in Pacific Ocean a grim story of loss and determinatio...
published: 01 Feb 2014
Real Castaway Survival Story 16 mos in Pacific Ocean a grim story of loss and determination
Real Castaway Survival Story 16 mos in Pacific Ocean a grim story of loss and determination
Real Castaway Survival Story 16 mos in Pacific Ocean a grim story of loss and determination. A Mexican sailor whose boat washed up on a remote Pacific Island claims he survived 16 months adrift at sea. Jose Ivan said he left Mexico for El Salvador in September 2012 but drifted 8,000 miles in the wrong direction when his boat's engine cut out. He was found, dressed only in a pair of ragged underpants, when his 24ft fibreglass boat with propellerless engines washed ashore in Ebon Atoll, an outpost of the Marshall Islands. The Spanish-speaking man said his friend died at sea several months ago and claims he survived eating turtles he caught with his bare hands. He said he drank turtle blood to stay alive when there was no rain. 'His condition isn't good, but he's getting better,' Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology doing research on Ebon, told AFP. 'The boat is really scratched up and looks like it has been in the water for a long time. 'He's staying at the local council house and a family is feeding him. We've been giving him a lot of water, and he's gaining strength.' The castaway, who has no life-threatening injuries, is expected to be moved Majuro, the capital of the Marshall Islands, in the coming days.- published: 01 Feb 2014
- views: 0
2:27
Ebon Fun
Jacky Patrick Telina Kuki Rithen Kory Ralpho ?? summer of 2007...ebon, ebon...marshall isl...
published: 24 Jan 2009
author: mesalikatu14
Ebon Fun
Ebon Fun
Jacky Patrick Telina Kuki Rithen Kory Ralpho ?? summer of 2007...ebon, ebon...marshall islands...tour...MY FiRST TiME!! YAY!!! SORRY FOR MY MARSHALLESE....ST...- published: 24 Jan 2009
- views: 15126
- author: mesalikatu14
1:25
Jose Ivan-Shipwrecked Man Drifted 8300 Miles - Survived 16 Months At Sea
Jose Ivan Shipwrecked Man Drifted 8300 Miles Survived 16 Months At Sea
http://youtu.be/8...
published: 01 Feb 2014
Jose Ivan-Shipwrecked Man Drifted 8300 Miles - Survived 16 Months At Sea
Jose Ivan-Shipwrecked Man Drifted 8300 Miles - Survived 16 Months At Sea
Jose Ivan Shipwrecked Man Drifted 8300 Miles Survived 16 Months At Sea http://youtu.be/8hw6wtEHl_c Jose Ivan was shipwrecked late in 2012 off the coast of Mexico, but incredibly the man somehow managed to survive a trip of more than 16 months and 8,300 miles by eating turtles and drinking fish blood. Ivan was found by a Norwegian researcher, who said the sailor spoke Spanish and had a long beard. The man, who said his name was Jose Ivan, had set out with a travel companion back in 2012 in a 24-foot fiberglass boat, leaving Mexico and headed toward El Salvador. The companion apparently died several months ago. "His condition isn't good, but he's getting better," said Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology student who found the man on Ebon, an atoll of 22 small islands that make up part of the Marshall Islands. "The boat is really scratched up and looks like it has been in the water for a long time," added the researcher. "He has a long beard and hair." Jose Ivan had an incredible tale of survival at sea, something reminiscent of Ang Lee's The Life Of Pi. The shipwrecked man said he was able to stay alive by eating turtles that he caught with his hands. When there wasn't enough rain to drink, he would resort to drinking the blood of fish and birds he caught. Ivan was able to do this without any kind of fishing equipment. The shipwrecked man is not the first one to survive for several months in the Pacific Ocean. In 2006, three Mexicans were lost on a shark-fishing trip and drifted in the middle of the ocean for nine months before being discovered alive. In 1992, two fishermen from Kiribati lived for close to six months at sea. Another shipwrecked man survived three days underwater last year, breathing in a pocket of air created when his ship sank in a lake in Nigeria. Ivan is now being cared for by some locals. "He's staying at the local council house and a family is feeding him," said Fjeldstad. Shipwrecked man Jose Ivan will have to wait a little longer before he can return home, however. The lone airplane owned by the Ebon government is grounded for maintenance and won't be able to return until early next week. Officials are considering sending a boat to pick him up. Castaway lost at sea for 16 MONTHS washes up on reef after 8,000 mile trip eating turtles Here's an astonishing story of human endurance that could have come straight from a Hollywood movie. An emaciated Mexican man has been found washed up on a remote Pacific reef after living for 16 months at sea and drifting 8,000 miles in a broken down boat. In an epic adventure of survival that mimics Tom Hanks' Chuck Noland character in the film Cast Away, Jose Ivan ate birds, turtles and fish while drinking the blood of his catches to stay alive. He was found dressed only in his tatty underpants on the tiny Ebon Atoll on the Marshall Islands -- 620 miles north of the Solomon Islands -- by astounded locals. Norwegian anthropology student Ola Fjeldstad, who is stationed on the atoll, told how he met the castaway. He said: "His condition isn't good but he's getting better. The boat is really scratched up and looks like it's been in the water a long time. "We've given him a lot of water and he's gaining strength." Jose told Ola he and a colleague left Mexico for El Salvador in September 2012. But his companion died several months ago after their 24ft fibreglass boat lost power and began drifting. Ola said there was no fishing gear in the craft but they did find a turtle inside. Jose told the researcher he caught food with his bare hands He is being looked after by a family in a council house on Ebon. A health check found he had low blood pressure. But he did not have any life-threatening illness and was able to walk with help. They survived on rainwater, fish and seabirds -- with their spirits kept high by reading the bible. Castaway who 'survived 16 months adrift at sea' washes up on remote Pacific Island A Mexican sailor whose boat washed up on a remote Pacific Island claims he survived 16 months adrift at sea. Castaway: Shipwrecked man makes land 'after 16 months adrift' Shipwrecked man washes up on Pacific atoll 'after spending 16 months adrift, floating up to 8,000 miles from Mexico' Man lost on the Pacific Ocean for '16 months' reaches shore on remote Ebon Atoll Man claims to have survived 16 months adrift in Pacific Jose Ivan, found off Marshall Islands, says he set out from Mexico, 8,000 miles away, and survived on turtles and fish Castaway tells tale of 16-month Pacific survival to rival Life of Pi José Ivan, found washed up in boat on Marshall Islands, lived on diet of hand-caught birds and turtles in propeller-less boat Real Life Castaway: Man Survives 16 Months Adrift in Pacific- published: 01 Feb 2014
- views: 40
3:56
Castaway "Stocky Man" Suspiciously Healthy Survivor Jose Ivan Alvarengo Investigation
Castaway "Stocky Man" Suspiciously Survivor Jose Ivan Alvarengo Investigation. A mysteriou...
published: 03 Feb 2014
Castaway "Stocky Man" Suspiciously Healthy Survivor Jose Ivan Alvarengo Investigation
Castaway "Stocky Man" Suspiciously Healthy Survivor Jose Ivan Alvarengo Investigation
Castaway "Stocky Man" Suspiciously Survivor Jose Ivan Alvarengo Investigation. A mysterious castaway claiming to have been lost at sea for 13 months is now safely back on land, but many questions remain about how he could have lived on his small boat for so long as it drifted across the Pacific Ocean. The man calling himself Jose Ivan Alvarengo turned up in a heavily damaged boat on a remote coral atoll in the Marshall Islands, claiming that he had been living off fish and turtles he had caught and relying on rainwater, and sometimes his own urine, to drink. Authorities are trying to determine the veracity of Alvarengo's story. He was found on sparsely populated Ebon Atoll, a 22-hour boat ride from the capital of Majuro, on Thursday. The southernmost of the Marshall Islands' atolls, Ebon has only 2.2 square miles of land, one phone line and no Internet service. The government airplane that services the atoll was not working, so Alvarengo did not make it to Majuro until Monday morning. Alvarengo, who says he is 37, is now in a local hospital recovering from his ordeal, said U.S. Ambassador Tom Armbruster. In a hospital-bed interview with The Telegraph of London, Alvarengo told of how he hit land. "I had just killed a bird to eat and saw some trees," he is quoted as saying. "I cried, 'Oh, God.' I got to land and had a mountain of sleep. In the morning, I woke up and heard a rooster and saw chickens and saw a small house. I saw two native women screaming and yelling. I didn't have any clothes; I was only in my underwear, and they were ripped and torn," The Telegraph quotes Alvarengo as saying. People on the island where he was found Thursday say the 26-foot fiberglass boat was in very bad condition, covered in barnacles and with the carcasses of several turtles littering the deck. Alvarengo claims to have set off from a port near the southwestern Mexican city of Tapachula, near the border with Guatemala, for what was supposed to be a one-day expedition to catch sharks on December 21, 2012. He claimed that he and a teenage companion were blown off-course by northerly winds and then caught in a storm, eventually losing use of their engines. According to Anjenette Kattil of the Marshall Islands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Alvarengo said that four weeks into their drift, he lost the young man because he refused to eat raw birds. There are no details on what Alvarengo did with the young man's body. Alvarengo told the Telegraph his companion's death had him contemplating suicide. "For four days, I wanted to kill myself. But I couldn't feel the desire; I didn't want to feel the pain. I couldn't do it," he is quoted as saying. Kattil said Alvarengo worked for a company named Camaroneras de la Costa in Mexico. He has told authorities that he is a citizen of El Salvador but has lived in Mexico for the past 15 years and wishes to be repatriated back to Mexico. Government officials have been in contact with Mexico's ambassador to the Marshall Islands, who is based in the Philippines, concerning Alvarengo in hopes he can contact El Salvadoran authorities. The Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement saying it has sent personnel from its embassy in the Philippines "to learn directly about the case." If Alvarengo's story proves true, the trip across the Pacific would have taken him across roughly 5,000 miles (8,000 kilometers) of open ocean before ending in the Marshall Islands, about halfway between Hawaii and Australia, in the northern Pacific. Such an amazing journey isn't unheard-of in the small Pacific nation, as three Mexican fishermen made a similar drift voyage in 2006 that lasted nine months. Those men lived off fish they caught and rainwater, and they read the Bible for comfort.- published: 03 Feb 2014
- views: 40
46:06
Majuro Intl. Airport / Majuro Atoll / PacSim - FSX
Pacific Islands Simulations - Marshall Islands International Airport / Majuro Atoll / ( PK...
published: 03 Sep 2012
author: SIM HANGER
Majuro Intl. Airport / Majuro Atoll / PacSim - FSX
Majuro Intl. Airport / Majuro Atoll / PacSim - FSX
Pacific Islands Simulations - Marshall Islands International Airport / Majuro Atoll / ( PKMJ ). Scenery by : http://islandsim.com/pacsim-store.html just lots...- published: 03 Sep 2012
- views: 955
- author: SIM HANGER
1:49
Jose Salvador Alvarenga Spent 13 Months Lost At Sea survives by eating birds !
A man who says he spent 13 months adrift in the Pacific Ocean begins sharing his extraordi...
published: 04 Feb 2014
Jose Salvador Alvarenga Spent 13 Months Lost At Sea survives by eating birds !
Jose Salvador Alvarenga Spent 13 Months Lost At Sea survives by eating birds !
A man who says he spent 13 months adrift in the Pacific Ocean begins sharing his extraordinary story of survival. Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga, who claims he survived more than a year adrift in the Pacific Ocean, says in an interview that he was unable to stand when he reached the remote Pacific island, Ebon Atoll A fisherman from El Salvador who washed ashore on the Marshall Islands has claimed he survived more than a year adrift in the Pacific Ocean, drinking turtle blood and catching fish and birds with his bare hands. On Thursday an emaciated Jose Salvador Alvarenga, 37, dressed in ragged clothes and in disoriented state was found on the Ebon Atoll, where he had washed up in his 24ft fibreglass boat. Though various details remain sketchy, Mr Alvarenga claims he spent over a year adrift in the Pacific Ocean, exposed to the elements in his tiny boat surviving on turtle blood and dead birds. He speaks no English and no one among the 700 islanders on Ebon Atoll spoke Spanish but using drawings and gestures he managed to explain to officials he set sail on a shark fishing trip late in December 2012 from Mexico, 6,200 miles away, but was blown out to sea. Alvarenga, who told authorities has been a fisherman for 15 years, set sail with another fisherman, aged 15 to 18, but the teenager died a month into their ordeal. He used pictures to indicate that he survived by eating turtles, birds and fish that he caught with his hands, and drinking turtle blood when there was no rain. Authorities said they were still gathering information and planned to contact his family in El Salvador and the US. Jose Salvador Alvarenga says he survived on fish, turtles and birds for 13-month, 8,800-km adrift Is this proof that castaway spent 14 months adrift at sea? Picture emerges of 37-year-old fisherman BEFORE he claims to have left on shark hunting trip Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga's story doubted after he returns from '13 months at sea' looking healthier than expected Jose Salvador Alvarenga's account has been met by a sceptical public in Majuro where he came ashore Jose Salvador Alvarenga: a tale of ocean survival that smells a bit fishy Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga describes his ordeal Jose Salvador Alvarenga, The Real Life Castaway Just like the movie Castaway played by Tom Hanks, 37 year-old Jose Salvador Alvarenga can say he experienced the real life ordeal. Castaway José Salvador Alvarenga Washes Up in Marshall Islands Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga's family rejoice at his survival Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga's story Doubted after he returns from '13 months at sea' Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga's story Doubted after he returns from '13 months at sea' The remarkable survival of castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga- published: 04 Feb 2014
- views: 6
3:32
Hot ladies from Enewetak atoll and Tim NL8F
DXpedition V73RRC 2010 to Marshall Islands, Sunset, perfect timing for 160m contacts. Real...
published: 07 Jul 2012
author: kl7rrc
Hot ladies from Enewetak atoll and Tim NL8F
Hot ladies from Enewetak atoll and Tim NL8F
DXpedition V73RRC 2010 to Marshall Islands, Sunset, perfect timing for 160m contacts. Real fun starts at 1:52.- published: 07 Jul 2012
- views: 870
- author: kl7rrc
6:44
Castaway Fisherman Adrift At Sea For 13 Months In Pacific - 4 Feb 2014
Castaway Fisherman Adrift At Sea For 13 Months In Pacific - 4 Feb 2014
A mysterious casta...
published: 04 Feb 2014
Castaway Fisherman Adrift At Sea For 13 Months In Pacific - 4 Feb 2014
Castaway Fisherman Adrift At Sea For 13 Months In Pacific - 4 Feb 2014
Castaway Fisherman Adrift At Sea For 13 Months In Pacific - 4 Feb 2014 A mysterious castaway claiming to have been lost at sea for 13 months is now safely back on land, but many questions remain about how he could have lived on his small boat for so long as it drifted across the Pacific Ocean. The man calling himself Jose Salvador Alvarenga turned up in a heavily damaged boat on a remote coral atoll in the Marshall Islands, claiming that he had been living off fish and turtles he had caught and relying on rainwater, and sometimes his own urine, to drink. Authorities are trying to determine the veracity of Alvarenga's story. The Mexican government issued a statement Monday confirming Alvarenga's identity and saying he was an El Salvador national who was living in Tonala in Chiapas state. Alvarenga is from Garita Palmera in El Salvador, where CNN caught up with some members of his family. They hadn't heard from him in ages and thought he might be dead. He has a 12-year-old daughter there who doesn't remember her father. "My heart would tell me that my son was not dead, but I wondered about it so often that I had started to lose faith," said Julia Alvarenga, his mother. "God willing, my son is not dead. God willing, my son is alive. And we're going to see him again one day. I'm very happy after learning that he's alive and that we will have him back home soon," his father, Ricardo, said. Alvarenga was found on sparsely populated Ebon Atoll, a 22-hour boat ride from the Marshall Islands capital of Majuro, on Thursday. The southernmost of the Marshall Islands' atolls, Ebon has only 2.2 square miles of land, one phone line and no Internet service. The government airplane that services the atoll was not working, so Alvarenga did not make it to Majuro until Monday morning. Video from Majuro shows Alvarenga walking a gangplank from a government boat to a waiting ambulance. Waving to those gathered around the dock, he is supported by a medical assistant as he walks. From inside the ambulance, he gives a thumbs up before it drives away. Alvarenga, who says he is 37, is now in a local hospital recovering from his ordeal, said Tom Armbruster, U.S. ambassador to the Marshall Islands. "He's in much better shape than one would expect after such an ordeal," Armbruster said. In a hospital-bed interview with The Telegraph of London, Alvarenga told of how he hit land. "I had just killed a bird to eat and saw some trees," he is quoted as saying. "I cried, 'Oh, God.' I got to land and had a mountain of sleep. In the morning, I woke up and heard a rooster and saw chickens and saw a small house. I saw two native women screaming and yelling. I didn't have any clothes; I was only in my underwear, and they were ripped and torn," The Telegraph quotes Alvarenga as saying. Subscibe For Breaking News http://worldbreakingnewschannel.blogspot.in/ TAGS Fisherman adrift at sea for 13 months Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific Fisherman Jose Salvador Alvarenga claims Mexican castaway begins long journey home Castaway wants to return to Mexico after Pacific ordeal Man 'drifted 13 months in Pacific' 'I wanted to kill myself', Mexico mystery castaway reveals Marshall Islands castaway Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific After months drifting across the Pacific, castaway Pacific castaway wants to go home abc breaking news, bbc, bbc football, bbc iplayer, bbc news, bbc news america, bbc persian, bbc sport, bbc weather, bbc world news, breaking celebrity news, breaking election news, breaking late news, breaking local news, breaking music news, breaking news, breaking news alerts, breaking news canada, breaking news headlines, breaking news in atlanta, breaking news in nigeria, breaking news india, breaking news pensacola florida, breaking news plane crash, breaking news story, breaking sports news, business expensive news home media world, christian world news, cnn, cnn breaking news, cnn money, cnn news, cnn news breaking news, cnn news world, detroit breaking news, global news, headline, headline news, health care technology news, hot latest global news, internet technology news, las vegas breaking news, latest breaking news, latest celebrity news, latest information technology news, latest- published: 04 Feb 2014
- views: 8
7:11
Majuro Atoll B737 landing
Fuel stop on Majuro Atoll on ferry flight from Arizona to Indonesia....
published: 21 Dec 2009
author: AVIACRU
Majuro Atoll B737 landing
Majuro Atoll B737 landing
Fuel stop on Majuro Atoll on ferry flight from Arizona to Indonesia.- published: 21 Dec 2009
- views: 23428
- author: AVIACRU
3:05
'Miracle Man of the Pacific' Castaway arrives at Marshall Islands capital
Castaway arrives at Marshall Islands capital
This is the first picture of the 'Miracle Ma...
published: 03 Feb 2014
'Miracle Man of the Pacific' Castaway arrives at Marshall Islands capital
'Miracle Man of the Pacific' Castaway arrives at Marshall Islands capital
Castaway arrives at Marshall Islands capital This is the first picture of the 'Miracle Man of the Pacific' - the fisherman who survived on turtle blood, raw fish and seagull flesh for more than a year as he drifted helplessly across the world's largest ocean. Stumbling ashore today at a dock in the Marshall Islands, Jose Salvador Albaniaga managed a smile before telling MailOnline: 'I'm alive - I'm alive and I can't believe it.' When asked about his ordeal he simply replied: 'I cannot remember much about my journey. It has all gone into one thought - the sea, the sea.' It had stretched out endlessly on all sides as Jose and his teenage fellow shark fisherman endured the most soul-destroying of conditions after their boat was left at the sole mercy of the currents when their engine broke down on December 21, 2012. Despite their attempts to attract other vessels, they continued to drift further out to sea. He watched his teenage fishing companion, aged between 15 and 18, slowly die under the relentless sun. Jose continued his own struggle for survival that was to endure for week after week, month after tortuous month, as he was forced to drink his own urine and pick ravenously at the raw flesh of seagulls. But today as he stepped ashore on the dock at the Marshall Islands' capital, Majuro, he told MailOnline exclusively: 'I survived because I prayed. I prayed all the time.' And while he believed that his faith had helped carry him through the 14 months he was adrift, it was also his determination to stay alive - grabbing turtles to drink their blood when there was no rain water, swallowing down his own urine, snatching seagulls to eat their flesh and hooking fish and eating them raw - that ensured his tenuous hold on life. 'I thank God that I am here,' he told MailOnline after his 24ft boat had drifted helplessly across 8,000 miles of treacherous seas, remarkably staying upright in storms, sitting idly in calm conditions, as the sole survivor thought about his family on a far-away continent. 'I'm alive, it is so good,' he said from his hospital bed after being brought to the Marshall Islands capital, Majuro. 'I thank God and I thank the birds I caught to eat. I caught fish and at times I drank my own urine to have liquid.' Of his ill-fated companion, all he would say is 'I'm sad for him'. Jose said he desperately wanted to phone his family - his wife and his 10-year-old daughter - in El Salvador but he cannot remember the name of the village or a phone number. 'I have forgotten many things,' he told MailOnline. Marshall Islands immigration chief Damien Jacklick said: 'With the help of the US ambassador, we were able to obtain information on his family members in El Salvador and the United States. We hope this information will help us track down his family.' Jose has even forgotten exactly how old he is. He 'believes' he is about 36 to 38, even though his ordeal has made him appear much older. 'He is here, with us, but he isn't here with us,' an interpreter who has spoken to Jose told MailOnline. 'He is still disorientated, there is no doubt about that.' Jose said: 'It has been a long time, but I feel safe now. I know, too that I will get back home.' When he arrived at the port in Majuro on board the naval ship that brought him from the atoll where he was found, he told MailOnline: 'I'm alive - I'm alive. I cannot believe it.' Nor could the village people of Ebon atoll, which he had luckily struck, believe it when they saw the tussel-haired man with a thick beard, standing on a beach in tattered shorts, which had been decayed by sea-salt. They stared in astonishment at the stranger, whose skin was burned dry by the sun and the sea spray - but typical of their generosity they put him into one of their own small boats and carried him to their main village where they clothed and fed him and gave him fresh water. A Norwegan anthropology student, Ola Fieldstad, who was in the area managed to learn a little of his extraordinary story through sign language and a series of drawings. Then the local Mayor put a call through on the atoll's only phone to alert the authorities in Majuro about the castaway. Astonishingly, the man who was in the care of the village for several days before he was brought to Majuro today, bore a striking resemblance to Tom Hanks' character in the movie Castaway, with his brown beard and tangled hair. Elements of Jose's story raced around the world...he had been at sea, said first reports, for 16 months; his companion had died after four months; he was completely emaciated. But as MailOnline established through his first words in the island capital and also witnessed he appeared in much better health than expected from such an ordeal. Jose doesn't appear emaciated from months of starvation. Doctors said, however, that his body was bloated from the conditions he had suffered.- published: 03 Feb 2014
- views: 51
3:42
Dolphins at Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands
Dolphins always come check out your boat when you're on ocean side of Kwajalein Atoll. I h...
published: 19 Mar 2012
author: Unidude29
Dolphins at Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands
Dolphins at Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands
Dolphins always come check out your boat when you're on ocean side of Kwajalein Atoll. I had my GoPro on a pole, and stuck it in the water to see them.- published: 19 Mar 2012
- views: 1092
- author: Unidude29
7:16
PG to Majuro Johnston Atoll part 3 of 5
Photos from the SV Good News, Prince George to Majuro, part 3 of 5. Emergency stop over t...
published: 30 Dec 2013
PG to Majuro Johnston Atoll part 3 of 5
PG to Majuro Johnston Atoll part 3 of 5
Photos from the SV Good News, Prince George to Majuro, part 3 of 5. Emergency stop over to effect repairs.- published: 30 Dec 2013
- views: 31
127:54
The Jesus Film - Marshallese / Ebon Language
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God).
According to the Gospel of L...
published: 26 Nov 2013
The Jesus Film - Marshallese / Ebon Language
The Jesus Film - Marshallese / Ebon Language
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God). According to the Gospel of Luke. (Marshall Islands) Marshallese / Ebon Language. God Bless You All.- published: 26 Nov 2013
- views: 66
Youtube results:
10:04
Marshall Islands, Ebeye (Atolls) part 1 of 2
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "...
published: 14 Dec 2010
author: TheKrazySystem
Marshall Islands, Ebeye (Atolls) part 1 of 2
Marshall Islands, Ebeye (Atolls) part 1 of 2
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, ...- published: 14 Dec 2010
- views: 32099
- author: TheKrazySystem
2:16
Mexican castaway dreams of return home after '13-month' sea ordeal
A Mexican castaway, who says he spent more than a year adrift in the Pacific, has pleaded ...
published: 02 Feb 2014
Mexican castaway dreams of return home after '13-month' sea ordeal
Mexican castaway dreams of return home after '13-month' sea ordeal
A Mexican castaway, who says he spent more than a year adrift in the Pacific, has pleaded to be taken home after washing up in the Marshall Islands. "I want to get back to Mexico," Jose Ivan reportedly said as he was taken to the islands' capital, Majuro, for a medical examination. Mr Ivan said he left Mexico with a friend for a trip in a fibre-glass boat in December 2012. He was found by people living on the island of Ebon Atoll on Thursday. 'Bad shape' When we got there we first found his boat, which was... grown over with shells and other sea animals" Ola Fjeldstad Norwegian student on Ebon Atoll Emaciated and wearing only ragged underpants, Mr Ivan washed ashore when his boat floated onto a reef at the small, isolated island. He apparently survived the 5,000-mile (8,000km) ordeal by catching fish, birds and turtles with his bare hands. He said his travelling companion died at sea many months ago. No details have emerged about how the 24ft (7m) boat ran into trouble or how his companion died. Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology student on Ebon Atoll, told the BBC how the castaway was apparently discovered: "A group of us got into the boat... and went over to meet him." "And when we got there we first found his boat, which was... grown over with shells and other sea animals. It had a live baby bird, a dead turtle, some turtle shells, and fish leftovers inside." "He was in really bad shape in terms of strength and in terms of mental health." As he boarded a Marshall Islands patrol vessel to Majuro on Sunday, he said: "I feel bad. I am so far away. I don't know where I am or what happened." AFP news agency reported that Mr Ivan, who only speaks Spanish, had been communicating with Ione deBrum, Ebon Atoll's mayor, by drawing pictures. Three Mexican fishermen were rescued off the Marshall Islands in August 2006 after what they said was about nine months drifting across the Pacific Ocean. They survived on rain water, sea birds and fish.- published: 02 Feb 2014
- views: 8
0:33
Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga describes his ordeal
Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga, who claims he survived more than a year adrift in the Pa...
published: 03 Feb 2014
Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga describes his ordeal
Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga describes his ordeal
Castaway Jose Salvador Alvarenga, who claims he survived more than a year adrift in the Pacific Ocean, says in an interview that he was unable to stand when he reached the remote Pacific island, Ebon Atoll A fisherman from El Salvador who washed ashore on the Marshall Islands has claimed he survived more than a year adrift in the Pacific Ocean, drinking turtle blood and catching fish and birds with his bare hands. On Thursday an emaciated Jose Salvador Alvarenga, 37, dressed in ragged clothes and in disoriented state was found on the Ebon Atoll, where he had washed up in his 24ft fibreglass boat. Though various details remain sketchy, Mr Alvarenga claims he spent over a year adrift in the Pacific Ocean, exposed to the elements in his tiny boat surviving on turtle blood and dead birds. He speaks no English and no one among the 700 islanders on Ebon Atoll spoke Spanish but using drawings and gestures he managed to explain to officials he set sail on a shark fishing trip late in December 2012 from Mexico, 6,200 miles away, but was blown out to sea. Alvarenga, who told authorities has been a fisherman for 15 years, set sail with another fisherman, aged 15 to 18, but the teenager died a month into their ordeal. He used pictures to indicate that he survived by eating turtles, birds and fish that he caught with his hands, and drinking turtle blood when there was no rain. Authorities said they were still gathering information and planned to contact his family in El Salvador and the US. Get the latest headlines http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Subscribe to The Telegraph http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=telegraphtv Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/telegraph.co.uk Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/telegraph Follow us on Google+ https://plus.google.com/102891355072777008500/ Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture.- published: 03 Feb 2014
- views: 48
1:22
Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific
Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific
For more Latest and Breaking News Headlin...
published: 04 Feb 2014
Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific
Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific
Castaway claims he drifted 13 months in Pacific For more Latest and Breaking News Headlines SUBSCRIBE to http://www.youtube.com/user/24X7BreakingNEWS A mysterious castaway claiming to have been lost at sea for 13 months is now safely back on land, but many questions remain about how he could have lived on his small boat for so long as it drifted across the Pacific Ocean. The man calling himself Jose Salvador Alvarenga turned up in a heavily damaged boat on a remote coral atoll in the Marshall Islands, claiming that he had been living off fish and turtles he had caught and relying on rainwater, and sometimes his own urine, to drink. Authorities are trying to determine the veracity of Alvarenga's story. The Mexican government issued a statement Monday confirming Alvarenga's identity and saying he was an El Salvador national who was living in Tonala in Chiapas state. Alvarenga is from Garita Palmera in El Salvador, where CNN caught up with some members of his family. They hadn't heard from him in ages and thought he might be dead. He has a 12-year-old daughter there who doesn't remember her father. "My heart would tell me that my son was not dead, but I wondered about it so often that I had started to lose faith," said Julia Alvarenga, his mother. "God willing, my son is not dead. God willing, my son is alive. And we're going to see him again one day. I'm very happy after learning that he's alive and that we will have him back home soon," his father, Ricardo, said. Alvarenga was found on sparsely populated Ebon Atoll, a 22-hour boat ride from the Marshall Islands capital of Majuro, on Thursday. The southernmost of the Marshall Islands' atolls, Ebon has only 2.2 square miles of land, one phone line and no Internet service. The government airplane that services the atoll was not working, so Alvarenga did not make it to Majuro until Monday morning. Video from Majuro shows Alvarenga walking a gangplank from a government boat to a waiting ambulance. Waving to those gathered around the dock, he is supported by a medical assistant as he walks. From inside the ambulance, he gives a thumbs up before it drives away. Alvarenga, who says he is 37, is now in a local hospital recovering from his ordeal, said Tom Armbruster, U.S. ambassador to the Marshall Islands. "He's in much better shape than one would expect after such an ordeal," Armbruster said. In a hospital-bed interview with The Telegraph of London, Alvarenga told of how he hit land. "I had just killed a bird to eat and saw some trees," he is quoted as saying. "I cried, 'Oh, God.' I got to land and had a mountain of sleep. In the morning, I woke up and heard a rooster and saw chickens and saw a small house. I saw two native women screaming and yelling. I didn't have any clothes; I was only in my underwear, and they were ripped and torn," The Telegraph quotes Alvarenga as saying. Teen survives 26 days adrift People on the island where he was found Thursday say the 26-foot fiberglass boat was in very bad condition, covered in barnacles and with the carcasses of several turtles littering the deck. Alvarenga is said to have set off from the Mexican town of Costa Azul, according to Reynaldo Aguilar Martinez, undersecretary for the state of Chiapas. He claims to have left for what was supposed to be a one-day expedition to catch sharks on December 21, 2012. TAGS abc breaking news, bbc, bbc football, bbc iplayer, bbc news, bbc news america, bbc persian, bbc sport, bbc weather, bbc world news, breaking celebrity news, breaking election news, breaking late news, breaking local news, breaking music news, breaking news, breaking news alerts, breaking news canada, breaking news headlines, breaking news in atlanta, breaking news in nigeria, breaking news india, breaking news pensacola florida, breaking news plane crash, breaking news story, breaking sports news, business expensive news home media world, christian world news, cnn, cnn breaking news, cnn money, cnn news, cnn news breaking news, cnn news world, detroit breaking news, global news, headline, headline news, health care technology news, hot latest global news, internet technology news, las vegas breaking news, latest breaking news, latest celebrity news, latest information technology news, latest music news, latest news, latest news headlines, latest news update, latest sports news, live breaking news, local breaking news, local news today, msn breaking news, nbc breaking news, nbc world news, news of the world, news report us world, news today news, news updated daily, solar technology news, sports news today, technology news, the latest news, today news, us news and world, us news and world report, us news and world report magazine, us news and world report web site, us news world report, world news, world news daily, world news headlines- published: 04 Feb 2014
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