More details:
BEAVER, Wash. (AP) – Three drift boat salmon fishermen were thrown into the Sol Duc River and one was unable to swim ashore and died, authorities said.
Charles “Tony” J. Boyle, 61, of McKenna, may have had a heart attack while trying to make his way through the swift, chilly current west of Port Angeles, said his companions, Jim Miller, 45, and Terry Sebastian, 30, both of Roy.
An autopsy was pending.
Boyle, who had caught a 28-pound king salmon moments before the boat hit a rock Thursday, was two feet from the river bank when his body went limp.
“I was screaming at him to swim, yelling, ’Swim, Tony, swim!”’ Miller said Saturday. “He was almost there, and he just didn’t make it.”
He said the three, who became friends through archery competitions, put their drift boat into the river Thursday at the Sol Duc Hatchery between Beaver and Sappho, an area where Boyle was a steelhead guide 15 years earlier. Miller was rowing.
“I never had any fear or any qualms about the stretches we were going through, no apprehension whatsoever,” he said.
About two miles downstream, the boat hit a rock in a swift rapids.
“The current ripped all the seats out of the boat, ripped all the life jackets out of the compartments,” Miller said. “In about three seconds, it gutted the boat.”
All three were wearing buoyant waders. Miller swam toward one bank and Boyle and Sebastian toward the other, but Boyle never made it to safety.
Miller found the boat by some rocks 200 to 300 yards downstream, then located Boyle’s body.
Sebastian, a Puyallup tribal fisheries biologist, walked upstream and found two campers who refused to help, then was picked up by three people on a pontoon boat that had passed the group several times that day.
One of the pontoon boaters, Brian Doolittle, 29, of Bothell, took an extra jacket, half a loaf of bread and some pop some water to stay with Miller and Boyle’s body while the others went for help. After darkness fell, the others ditched the pontoon boat and walked through the woods, finally alerting the Clallam County sheriff’s office about 7:30 p.m.
A search party reached Sebastian and Doolittle about 2 a.m. Friday, sheriff’s deputy Ed Anderson said.
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Information from: Peninsula Daily News,
http://www.peninsuladailynews.com