Coast Guard rescues sailor and his dog after 36-foot sailboat disabled off Florida coast as Hurricane Helene barreled toward land
The United States Coast Guard rescued a sailor and his dog stranded in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida as Hurricane Helene barreled its way toward land Thursday.
The man and his pooch were aboard a 36-foot sailboat that “became disabled and began taking on water” Thursday afternoon, the USCG Air Station Clearwater said on Facebook.
Coast Guard crews responded to the boater’s distress call and rushed to the man’s location, approximately 25 miles offshore from Sanibel Island near Fort Myers.
A successful rescue attempt was made and the unidentified sailor and his dog were saved and brought back to land.
One of the rescuers snapped a pic of the man and his dog wearing life vests as a USCG helicopter flew overhead.
It was not clear where the sailor was traveling to or from but small craft advisories and hurricane warnings had been in effect in the area as Helene hovered nearby.
A Small Craft Advisory means that wind speeds of 21 to 33 knots and or seas of 10 feet or higher are expected to produce hazardous wave conditions for small craft.
Hurricane Helene made landfall as a Category 4 storm at around 11:10 p.m. Thursday.
The eyewall moved over the Big Bend area and Florida panhandle with maximum sustained winds estimated at 140 mph.
The storm is forecasted to blast the region with hurricane-force winds with potentially “unsurvivable” 20-foot storm surge and flooding rain.
At least one person was killed Thursday when a driver was struck by a sign while driving on Interstate 4 in the Tampa Bay area, according to WTSP.
The deadly crash occurred just before 8 p.m. near mile marker 1.
The Pasco County Sheriff’s Office reported receiving over 20 calls for water rescues as the US 19 corridor in west Pasco began to flood by midnight, Friday morning.
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