A Peruvian fisherman who spent 95 days drifting at sea after his engine broke down is celebrating with his family.
As the BBC reports, Maximo Napa Castro ( 61) says he ate turtles, birds and cockroaches to survive after his food ran out a month ago. He was also 25 days without water, having caught rainwater when he could.
He left the southern Peruvian coastal town of Marcona on December 7th for what should have been a two-week fishing trip.
However, he ran into trouble about ten days in due to a combination of a storm and engine breakdown. He was reported to have had a month’s supply of food on board.
Peruvian maritime patrols were unable to locate him, but he was found last Wednesday over 1,000 km off the Ecuador coast by an Ecuadorian patrol vessel Don F. It reported that he was dehydrated and in a critical condition.
He was first reunited with his brother in Paita, near the Ecuadorian border, on Friday, where he had a medical assessment and was then flown to the Peruvian capital, Lima.
Castro said that thinking about his family and praying gave him the strength to survive.
"I thought about my mother everyday. I'm thankful to God for giving me a second chance," he told reporters. He also thought of his grand-daughter, born while he was drifting at sea.
Last year, Russian Mikhail Pichugin was rescued after spending 67 days drifting in a RIB in the Sea of Okhotsk, to the east of Russia.
A Salvadoran fisherman, José Salvador Alvarenga, survived a 13-month ordeal drifting in the Pacific, after he set out from the Mexican coast in late 2012 with another crewman who died.
Alvarenga also survived on rainwater and turtles and was found in the Marshall Islands in early 2014. Initially his claim was doubted, but later reports confirmed that his boat was reported missing in November 2012.
See the BBC report on Castro’s reunion with his brother here

















































