Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- NFL Hall of Famer Larry Csonka was among six people plucked by helicopter from a stranded boat during a harrowing rescue in the Bering Sea, a newspaper reported Sunday.

 

Csonka, his partner, and a film crew from his television show were not injured, but the boat was abandoned at sea, the Anchorage Daily News reported in Sunday editions.

 

Csonka was part of a group returning from filming a hunting trip on an isolated island about 100 miles west of Unalaska on Wednesday when their 28-foot boat encountered bad weather.

 

The newspaper reported that 9-foot seas and gale force winds made it difficult to navigate the vessel, which then drifted away from the Aleut village of Nikolski.

 

After hours of worsening conditions, the Coast Guard was called to help shortly after midnight Wednesday. A Coast Guard helicopter was dispatched from Kodiak, 600 miles away; it arrived around 10:45 a.m. Thursday and hoisted those on the battered boat one-by-one in a basket.

 

"We might very well have died if we stayed out there. It was tense," the 58-year-old Csonka told the newspaper Saturday in a phone interview from a hotel in Unalaska.

 

"It was 10 or 12 hours of moment-to-moment with sea sickness and not being able to drink water because it was so rough, and hanging onto each other," he said.

 

Csonka, his partner Audrey Bradshaw, film crew members John Dietrich and Rich Larson, and Thomas McCay, the guide for the hunt, were taping the event for the show "North to Alaska" when the weather worsened. Also on board the distressed boat was captain Dwight Johnson.

 

The former fullback for the Syracuse Orangemen Miami Dolphins, Csonka runs Zonk! Productions, which films episodes for his outdoor sports TV show.

Posted

wow

 

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- NFL Hall of Famer Larry Csonka was among six people plucked by helicopter from a stranded boat during a harrowing rescue in the Bering Sea, a newspaper reported Sunday.

 

Csonka, his partner, and a film crew from his television show were not injured, but the boat was abandoned at sea, the Anchorage Daily News reported in Sunday editions.

 

Csonka was part of a group returning from filming a hunting trip on an isolated island about 100 miles west of Unalaska on Wednesday when their 28-foot boat encountered bad weather.

 

The newspaper reported that 9-foot seas and gale force winds made it difficult to navigate the vessel, which then drifted away from the Aleut village of Nikolski.

 

After hours of worsening conditions, the Coast Guard was called to help shortly after midnight Wednesday. A Coast Guard helicopter was dispatched from Kodiak, 600 miles away; it arrived around 10:45 a.m. Thursday and hoisted those on the battered boat one-by-one in a basket.

 

"We might very well have died if we stayed out there. It was tense," the 58-year-old Csonka told the newspaper Saturday in a phone interview from a hotel in Unalaska.

 

"It was 10 or 12 hours of moment-to-moment with sea sickness and not being able to drink water because it was so rough, and hanging onto each other," he said.

 

Csonka, his partner Audrey Bradshaw, film crew members John Dietrich and Rich Larson, and Thomas McCay, the guide for the hunt, were taping the event for the show "North to Alaska" when the weather worsened. Also on board the distressed boat was captain Dwight Johnson.

 

The former fullback for the Syracuse Orangemen Miami Dolphins, Csonka runs Zonk! Productions, which films episodes for his outdoor sports TV show.

437595[/snapback]

Posted
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- NFL Hall of Famer Larry Csonka was among six people plucked by helicopter from a stranded boat during a harrowing rescue in the Bering Sea, a newspaper reported Sunday.

 

Csonka, his partner, and a film crew from his television show were not injured, but the boat was abandoned at sea, the Anchorage Daily News reported in Sunday editions.

 

Csonka was part of a group returning from filming a hunting trip on an isolated island about 100 miles west of Unalaska on Wednesday when their 28-foot boat encountered bad weather.

 

The newspaper reported that 9-foot seas and gale force winds made it difficult to navigate the vessel, which then drifted away from the Aleut village of Nikolski.

 

After hours of worsening conditions, the Coast Guard was called to help shortly after midnight Wednesday. A Coast Guard helicopter was dispatched from Kodiak, 600 miles away; it arrived around 10:45 a.m. Thursday and hoisted those on the battered boat one-by-one in a basket.

 

"We might very well have died if we stayed out there. It was tense," the 58-year-old Csonka told the newspaper Saturday in a phone interview from a hotel in Unalaska.

 

"It was 10 or 12 hours of moment-to-moment with sea sickness and not being able to drink water because it was so rough, and hanging onto each other," he said.

 

Csonka, his partner Audrey Bradshaw, film crew members John Dietrich and Rich Larson, and Thomas McCay, the guide for the hunt, were taping the event for the show "North to Alaska" when the weather worsened. Also on board the distressed boat was captain Dwight Johnson.

 

The former fullback for the Syracuse Orangemen Miami Dolphins, Csonka runs Zonk! Productions, which films episodes for his outdoor sports TV show.

437595[/snapback]

 

 

"His partner"....

 

Is Larry Gay?

Posted
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- NFL Hall of Famer Larry Csonka was among six people plucked by helicopter from a stranded boat during a harrowing rescue in the Bering Sea, a newspaper reported Sunday.

 

Csonka, his partner, and a film crew from his television show were not injured, but the boat was abandoned at sea, the Anchorage Daily News reported in Sunday editions.

 

Csonka was part of a group returning from filming a hunting trip on an isolated island about 100 miles west of Unalaska on Wednesday when their 28-foot boat encountered bad weather.

 

The newspaper reported that 9-foot seas and gale force winds made it difficult to navigate the vessel, which then drifted away from the Aleut village of Nikolski.

 

After hours of worsening conditions, the Coast Guard was called to help shortly after midnight Wednesday. A Coast Guard helicopter was dispatched from Kodiak, 600 miles away; it arrived around 10:45 a.m. Thursday and hoisted those on the battered boat one-by-one in a basket.

 

"We might very well have died if we stayed out there. It was tense," the 58-year-old Csonka told the newspaper Saturday in a phone interview from a hotel in Unalaska.

 

"It was 10 or 12 hours of moment-to-moment with sea sickness and not being able to drink water because it was so rough, and hanging onto each other," he said.

 

Csonka, his partner Audrey Bradshaw, film crew members John Dietrich and Rich Larson, and Thomas McCay, the guide for the hunt, were taping the event for the show "North to Alaska" when the weather worsened. Also on board the distressed boat was captain Dwight Johnson.

 

The former fullback for the Syracuse Orangemen Miami Dolphins, Csonka runs Zonk! Productions, which films episodes for his outdoor sports TV show.

437595[/snapback]

 

Let's hear it for the Coast Guard! I'm proud of my Coast Guard and the job we've been doing for 215 years. These past two weeks have put us back in the minds of the American public.

 

Yes, I'm in the Coast Guard, and proud of it.

Posted

if i am not mistaken, audrey is usually a female name. although I did know a guy whose name was beverly, so anything is possible

 

"His partner"....

 

Is Larry Gay?

437631[/snapback]

Posted
"His partner"....

 

Is Larry Gay?

437631[/snapback]

 

Probably. Not that there's anything wrong with that. He has a moustache afterall. :doh:

However, he was a Dolphag, and there's plenty wrong with THAT! :doh:

 

Actually I'm glad he didn't go down with the ship.

Posted
Probably. Not that there's anything wrong with that. He has a moustache afterall.  :doh:

However, he was a Dolphag, and there's plenty wrong with THAT!  :doh:

Actually I'm glad he didn't go down with the ship.

437653[/snapback]

I didn't read that in the article. I just remember him playing for Syracuse. :doh: That's what the article I posted says.

×
×
  • Create New...