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Sky News
10 August 2004
Four British rowers who survived a hurricane in the mid-Atlantic
have been reunited with their families.
The rowers were plucked from the sea by rescuers after the
storm hit their boat "like a missile" and tore it
apart.
Rowers Mark Stubbs, Pete Bray, Jonathan Gornall and John Wills
flew into Southampton Airport where they were hugged and kissed
by wives and girlfriends.
The men had been attempting to row across the Atlantic west
to east.
They were just 300 miles from the finish line when a 60ft
rogue wave smashed into their craft - the Pink Lady - off
the south coast of Ireland.
The ferocity of the wave broke the craft in two, plunging the
men into the water in heavy seas.
"We were lying in the cabin listening to the waves coming
in. Most of the waves were benign and went with the boat but
there were rogue waves," Mr Gornall said.
"We then heard one coming sounding like an express train
and then there were twin detonations and the next thing I
was in the water and I knew something catastrophic had happened.
"I thought at the time 'I do not think I can hold my
breath much longer'."
Former SAS diver Pete Bray, 48, from Bridgend, south Wales,
twice dived into the broken craft to get the crew's life raft
and survival kit.
"For me and the others, he is a bit of a hero,"
Mr Gornall said of his crewmate.
The men also paid tribute to the Falmouth coastguard, the
RAF Nimrod and the skipper of the Scandinavia Reefer vessel
which came to their rescue.
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