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Saanich teenager safe after maritime rescue Monday

Crews from two communities and a private vessel combine to save Saanich teenager
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As the red Zodiac-style vessel from Oak Bay Search and Rescue approached the shore line not far Saanich’s Beach House Restaurant, Mina and Mike Purewal began to run as fast as the sands and rocks allowed it.

Dodging past curious by-standers, the couple couldn’t wait to hold their son Jovin, who had spent the past couple hours inside his kayak, fighting the winds and waves sweeping between the Saanich Peninsula and D’Arcy Island.

Fifteen-year-old Jovin had left for the small island from a nearby beach at around 11 a.m. Monday. A member of Gorge Narrows Rowing Club, the avid kayaker and canoeist had always wanted to check out the small island, a former leper colony from 1891 to 1924.

“He has been wanting to do that for some time,” said Mike. “We told him to wait until the weather got better.”

Monday offered that opportunity and the St. Andrew’s student arrived on the island without incident. After spending some time there, he set off for the return trip at around 2:20 p.m. after he had called his dad by cell-phone to let him know that he would be returning, with an estimated return time of 90 minutes or so.

While Mina and Mike could follow Jovin with a pair of binoculars during his trip towards D’Arcy Island from their nearby home, he did not come into view, as the clock was ticking down. Increasingly worried, the couple placed a 9/11 call.

After heading to the beach to get a better look, Mina scanned the waves with the binoculars, while Mike talked to Jovin over his cell-phone. They eventually located him further up the Peninsula, nowhere near where they had been looking so anxiously.

“The wind kept pushing up north,” said Mike.

But the eventual fate of Jovin, who wore a life vest during the entire time, still hung in the balance. As Saanich emergency crews were readying a Zodiac-vessel on their own to recover Jovin, a nearby vessel belonging to the Victoria-based SpringTide Whale Watching and Charter picked up the radio chatter and eventually pulled the teenager and his kayak to safety.

“Thank you, thank you, thank you, very much for helping out my son,” said Mike into his cell phone.

By this time, a small crowd of curious on-lookers and Saanich police officers had gathered on the beach. When it became clear Jovin was out of the water, strangers congratulated the Purewals, who celebrated the rescue of their son with a deep embrace as hours of anxiety washed away.

The white whale-watching vessel carrying Jovin went south to meet a bright-red rescue Zodiac out of Oak Bay. The two vessels briefly andJovin transferred to the rescue boat.

When the Purewals finally arrived at the spot, where the Oak Bay Zodiac had dropped off Jovin, Saanich fire crews had already tucked him inside the cabin of one their pick-up trucks to administer initial medical care.

After (presumably) some hugs from mom, and more medical care, a healthy Jovin returned home Monday evening.



Wolf Depner

About the Author: Wolf Depner

I joined the national team with Black Press Media in 2023 from the Peninsula News Review, where I had reported on Vancouver Island's Saanich Peninsula since 2019.
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