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Crews of Kon Tiki balsa rafts rescued hundreds of miles off course

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

This photo, provided by the Chilean Navy, shows one of two rafts of the Kon-Tiki 2 expedition rescued by a Chilean Navy ship, about 994 miles west of Puerto Montt in southern Chile today.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

In this photo provided by the Chilean Navy, of the one of two rafts of the Kon-Tiki 2 is seen floating on the Pacific ocean, about 994 miles west of Puerto Montt in southern Chile today.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Chilean Navy rescued 14 crewmembers aboard two balsa rafts that were swept up in strong currents hundreds of miles off the coast today.

SANTIAGO, Chile >> Fourteen crewmembers aboard two balsa rafts were rescued today after the vessels were swept up in strong currents hundreds of miles off Chile’s coast.

The Kon-Tiki 1 and 2 rafts set sail in early January from Chile’s Easter Island in the Pacific Ocean toward the port city of Valparaiso, Chile.

However, strong currents pulled them far off course. The Chilean Navy said in a statement that the rafts were about 994 miles west of Puerto Montt in southern Chile. The Navy was sending a merchant ship about 200 nautical miles away from the rafts plus a plane to track them from the sky. The group sent out a distress signal Wednesday asking for assistance.

Later Thursday, authorities said the 14 were rescued by the Vanuatu-flagged Hokuetsu Ushaka, which was the closest boat to the rafts.

The official website said the group had been sailing to document climate change, pollution and marine life in the Pacific.

In a statement, expedition leader Torgeir Higraff said they were aborting the voyage for safety reasons.

“In a normal year, we would have reached South America by now,” said Higraff. “Instead, we are still 900 nautical miles from land and the weather forecasts are not promising. The crew is in good health and spirit, and there is no emergency situation.”

The crews include citizens of Norway, Peru, Mexico, New Zealand, Russia and Sweden.

Admiral Mario Montejo, director of maritime operations and security, said “they are in good health, just a bit tired.”

The original Kon Tiki set sail in 1947 from Peru. The expedition was led by Norwegian Thor Heyerdahl, who was seeking to prove his theory that winds and marine currents allowed for prehistoric sailing trips between South America and Polynesia.

After 101 days, Heyerdahl and five crew members reached the island of Raroia in the Tuamoto Archipelago. A book about the expedition was translated into dozens of languages. In 1951, Heyerdahl’s film about the journey won an Oscar.

8 responses to “Crews of Kon Tiki balsa rafts rescued hundreds of miles off course”

  1. st1d says:

    thor heyerdahl caught a lucky tide and current, but his theory that ancient polynesian mariners used the same sailing methods to populate and travel between pacific islands is intellectual fraud based on perceived european sailing skills superiority.

    heyerdahl refused to admit or accept that polynesian navigators could sail to and from tiny islands separated by thousands of miles without charts reading the stars, winds and waves.

  2. calentura says:

    They wanted to document climate change, pollution and marine life; and because all three of these things are just so so difficult to prove, they set themselves adrift. That’s just plain brilliant..! Don’t anyone tell them there may be blood in their veins.

  3. bumbye says:

    because they weren’t trained by a Micronesian wayfinder

  4. bumbye says:

    That looks like a raft made by Gilligan and Skipper.

  5. Kaaihue4Mayor says:

    OMG that is a crazy boat!

  6. cojef says:

    The photo shows a very unstable and far from being seaworthy in very rough seas. In real rough seas it will break up and become a menace to other crafts plying the same waters.

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