Please select your home edition
Edition
Rick Dodson - 3 140623

Rescue beacon alerts top 450 for 2016

by Maritime NZ on 11 Jan 2017
Platino was one of the 450 EPIRB alerts made in NZ in 2016 - Image supplied from the Southern Lily Supplied .
A woman climber sustaining severe head injuries on Christmas Day, and a motor boat stuck on a sandbar off Foxton Beach, were among the more than 450 rescue beacon incidents for 2016.

The Rescue Coordination Centre of New Zealand received 146 beacon alerts north of Taupo last year, and 107 in the lower half of the North Island. In the South Island a total 95 were received from locations north of Christchurch, and 115 from the lower half of the island. The totals include alerts received for incidents in the air, on land, and on the seas and waterways.

The rescue of two men and a woman from their battered yacht, Platino, north of New Zealand in June, was among some of the dramatic maritime incidents. Last month an alert to RCCNZ assisted Coastguard’s rescue of a party of five, whose motor boat had run aground on the bar off Foxton beach.

On land, the Christmas Day rescue of the woman climber from 1800 metres high in the Aoraki National Park was hampered by cloud. RCCNZ coordinated efforts throughout the afternoon to reach the badly injured woman, with the helicopter crew finally getting her onboard as darkness closed in.

RCCNZ Manager Mike Hill says the number and range of beacon users is growing. The total of beacons registered in the RCCNZ database increased by more than 11,000 last year, to 62,241.


“It is not just boaties, but also more trampers, mountain bikers, hunters, climbers and people working in isolated areas, who are realising a beacon may save their life,” says Mr Hill.

“We coordinate about 850 search and rescue incidents each year, rescuing people and saving lives,” he says.

“Many responses begin with a distress beacon being activated. They are one of the most reliable ways of signaling that you are in distress - whether you are a boatie or on land.”

Mike reminds all those who received a welcome surprise in their Christmas ‘stocking’, and all new users, that rescue beacons must be registered. (It is free.)

“If the beacon is activated we ring the contact person - usually a family member or friend - to find out what the beacon user is doing, his or her route plan, how many people are in the party, and how well equipped they are.

“The important point to remember is we need up-to-date contact details in our database, so we can track down as much information as possible. Then we can work out what type of rescue services are required – such as a helicopter or land-based SAR crew – and what type of causality they may encounter when arriving at the beacon location,” says Mr Hill.


New Zealand’s search and rescue region is one of the biggest in the world - stretching from the mid-Tasman Sea, halfway to Chile, and from the South Pole, almost to the Equator.

“To cover such a huge area our search and rescue ‘team’ must be more than only our staff here at the RCCNZ,” Mr Hill says.

“It includes Police and other emergency services, volunteers such as Coastguard and LandSAR, the New Zealand Defence Force, and also the people, ships and aircraft from any country in the world who happen to be in our region - whether they need our help or if they are the ones we will use for search and rescue.”

RCCNZ also provides the 24/7 Maritime Radio Service. This includes monitoring channel 16, the international VHF channel for maritime emergency distress calls.

To register your beacon go to www.beacons.org.nz for more information.

Selden 2020 - FOOTERWhangarei Marina 2 (728 x 90px) BOTTOMBoat Books Australia FOOTER

Related Articles

Cup Spy May 9: Testing the wind machine
Luna Rossa have been testing the old and new AC75 wingfoils as they wind down in Cagliari Luna Rossa sailed for the fourth successive day from Cagliari, Sardinia. A point of interest on Thursday was the relative performance of its two wing foils - one to the new AC75 Class Rule, the other a legacy foil used in the 2021 America's Cup.
Posted today at 2:52 pm
Ambrogio Beccaria wins The Transat CIC in Class40
Crossing the line of the historic race at 03:47:55 hrs this morning Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria on his all Italian designed and built Musa 40 Alla Grande Pirelli added the hugely prestigious Transat CIC Class 40 title to his steadily growing collection of solo and short handed ocean racing honours this morning.
Posted today at 8:19 am
Marine Auctions: May Online Auctions
Bidding to open on Friday 24th May May 2024 Online Auction Bidding to Open Friday 24th May Close Thursday 30th May at 2pm AEST.
Posted today at 5:16 am
Is this the slipperiest AC75 boat in the fleet?
There's plenty to suggest American Magic's 'Patriot' is the most refined aerodynamic package so far There's plenty to suggest that American Magic's AC75 'Patriot' is the most refined aerodynamic package so far and if that's the case the team's new machine could be the lowest drag Cup boat out there.
Posted today at 5:11 am
The 5 Minute Warning
Andy Rice & Matt Sheahan's 5min racing update PlanetSail's Matt Sheahan catches up with Sailjuice's Andy Rice who's reporting from the South of France. Andy's at the last big regatta for the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 classes before the Olympic Games just over a couple of months from now.
Posted on 9 May
44Cup Baiona Day 1
Strong start in light conditions From some way out the opening day of the 44Cup Baiona, the second event of the 2024 circuit for the high performance owner-driver RC44 one designs, was looking light.
Posted on 9 May
The Transat CIC Update
Ambrogio Beccaria has Class 40 finish line and victory 'in sight' With less than 140 miles to go to the finish line of the Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria appears to have dealt with the last weather hurdle earlier today.
Posted on 9 May
49er & 49er FX Europeans & Nacra 17 Worlds Day 3
Lighter breeze launches young Germans up the FX rankings A drop in wind strength brought huge changes to the 49erFX leaderboard on day three of the European Championship in La Grande Motte in the South of France.
Posted on 9 May
470 Europeans at Cannes Day 3
While racing did get underway in light winds, the breeze then dropped to nothing While racing did get underway in light winds, with a full lap completed, the breeze then dropped to nothing, resulting in the race being abandoned. Unfortunately that was it for the day and the fleet were sent ashore.
Posted on 9 May
Cup Spy May 8: First cross in Barcelona
Three teams sail AC75s off Barcelona on Wednesday, the first opportunity for the teams to tangle Three teams sailed AC75s off Barcelona on Wednesday, the first opportunity for the teams to tangle, and have the inevitable accidental hookup as the Challengers sized up their opposition for the first time. A fourth team Luna Rossa worked up off Cagliari.
Posted on 9 May