logo
Fisherman survived 95 days lost at sea by eating turtles and birds

Fisherman survived 95 days lost at sea by eating turtles and birds

Independent16-03-2025

A Peruvian fisherman who spent 95 days lost in the Pacific Ocean, eating roaches, birds and sea turtles to survive, is set to be reunited with his family.
Maximo Napa had set off for a fishing trip from Marcona, a town on the southern Peruvian coast, on December 7.
He packed food for a two week trip but ten days in, stormy weather threw his boat off course and he ended up adrift in the Pacific Ocean
.His family launched a search but Peru's maritime patrols were unable to locate him until Wednesday, when an Ecuadorian fishing patrol discovered him some 680 miles (1,094 km) off the country's coast, heavily dehydrated and in critical condition.
"I did not want to die," Napa told Reuters after reuniting with his brother, in Paita, near the border with Ecuador. "I ate roaches, birds, the last thing I ate was turtles."
He said he stayed strong thinking about his family, including his two-month-old granddaughter, even as he survived on rainwater he collected on the boat and ran out of food, ultimately spending the last 15 days without eating.
"I thought about my mother everyday," he said. "I'm thankful to God for giving me a second chance.
His mother, Elena Castro, told local media that while her relatives had stayed optimistic she had began to lose hope.
"I told the Lord, whether he's alive or dead, just bring him back to me, even if it's just to see him," she told TV Peru.
"But my daughters never lost faith. They kept telling me: Mom, he'll come back, he'll come back."
Napa was scheduled for more medical checks in Paita before heading south to Lima.
His niece, Leyla Torres Napa, said the family planned to celebrate his birthday, which passed while he was lost at sea.
She said: "The day of his birth was unique because all that he could eat [while at sea] was a small cookie, so it is very important for us that we celebrate because, for us, he has been reborn."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Five tennis-themed holidays across Europe in time for Wimbledon from UK countryside clubs to Greek coastal resorts
Five tennis-themed holidays across Europe in time for Wimbledon from UK countryside clubs to Greek coastal resorts

Scottish Sun

time12 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Five tennis-themed holidays across Europe in time for Wimbledon from UK countryside clubs to Greek coastal resorts

You can even brush up on your skills alongside former world number eight Marcos Baghdatis NEW HOLS PLEASE Five tennis-themed holidays across Europe in time for Wimbledon from UK countryside clubs to Greek coastal resorts Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) TENNIS season is upon us and Wimbledon begins in less than two weeks' time. But why leave all the fun to the pros? Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 The Pine Cliffs Resort in Portugal features programmes designed by former British No 1 Annabel Croft Credit: Supplied These tennis-themed holidays will get you volleying like Alcaraz and serving like Raducanu in no time. Sophie Swietochowski shares her five top picks for keen tennis players. 1. Puente Romano MARBELLA, SPAIN YOU won't need to worry about tiring yourself out on the tennis courts at Puente Romano Marbella, as this resort's excellent selection of restaurants will keep you very well fuelled. Set on the city's Golden Mile, the plush hotel houses famous Japanese spot Nobu and a sophisticated Peruvian joint as well as a whopping 18 other restaurants. 6 Puente Romano Marbella is great for foodies as well as tennis fans Credit: Supplied Its well-known tennis club, which opened in 1979, has welcomed a whole host of sporting heroes through its doors, including Serena Williams, Novak Djokovic and Boris Becker. And that's no surprise when you consider the range of facilities here. There are ten tennis courts (eight clay and two plexipave) plus four padel courts, as well as massage rooms, a sauna and Turkish bath to soothe any aching muscles. All of this does come with a pretty hefty price tag, though. GO: Private tennis coaching costs from €80 per hour. Four nights' B&B costs from £1,167pp including flights from Gatwick on October 31. See Emma Raducanu reveals she keeps being BANNED from Italian Open grounds and was exposed by 2. Foxhills CHERTSEY, SURREY ANYONE wanting to stay a little closer to home should look no further than Foxhills Hotel & Country Club which is tucked away in 400 rolling acres of Surrey countryside. However, it is still close enough to the capital if you want to get in on the Wimbledon action for real. 6 Foxhills Hotel & Country Club is tucked away in 400 rolling acres of Surrey countryside Credit: Supplied The resort features nine tennis courts in total (four acrylic, four artificial clay and one all-weather), plus you can try your hand at the increasingly popular racket sport of padel on one of three courts, or even pickleball – another fun racket pastime. Little ones aspiring to make it into the big leagues should head down to the hotel on June 28 to see the juniors competing in the Road To Wimbledon tournament. Tired of all the tennis? Stretch your limbs in the on-site yoga cabin, kick back in the luxurious spa or grab a tipple on the terrace, overlooking the golfing green. GO: A double room costs from £355, based on two sharing on June 29. See or call 01932 872 050. 3. Pine Cliffs Resort ALGARVE, PORTUGAL WHETHER you're a total beginner or a seriously experienced player, Pine Cliffs has a training programme to suit all skill levels. Set on the coast in Portugal's Algarve region, the 5* resort isn't just a fly-and-flop spot – although there are plenty of sunloungers and ample balcony space for those who do want some chill time. 6 Pine Cliffs has a training programme to suit all skill levels Credit: Supplied It's also home to an excellent Tennis Academy, with programmes that have been designed by former British No 1 Annabel Croft. There are eight floodlit courts: two clay and two hard tennis courts as well as four for padel. Guests can book on to group sessions or weekend tennis camps, while those taking their favourite sport a little more seriously can sign up for some private coaching to improve their game. GO : Adult Tennis or padel weekly coaching courses start from £300 per adult and £265 per child in off-peak season (Nov to March) and £326 per adult and £291 per child in peak season (April to Oct). : Adult Tennis or padel weekly coaching courses start from £300 per adult and £265 per child in off-peak season (Nov to March) and £326 per adult and £291 per child in peak season (April to Oct). Seven nights' B&B is from £1183.20pp including flights from Luton and transfers on September 30. See 4. Grecotel Luxme Daphnila Bay Hotel CORFU, GREECE UP for a bit of friendly competition? If you're travelling solo, you'll love this tennis-themed package at the 4* Grecotel Luxme Daphnila Bay Hotel on Corfu's eastern coast. 6 The 4* Grecotel Luxme Daphnila Bay Hotel is great for solo travellers Credit: Facebook Week-long packages booked through travel agent Solos Holidays come with five days of tennis camp and no single supplement, meaning each guest gets a room to themselves. Anyone keen to put their new skills to the test can get stuck into the weekly mixed-doubles finale with prizes. Just try not to get distracted by the jaw-dropping views from the quartz-sand hard courts – the Ionian Sea looks dazzling from up there. When you're not unleashing a mean serve, there are watersports galore, or mountain biking in the surrounding hills. GO : A seven-night, all-inclusive Corfu Tennis trip costs £1,995pp including flights and transfers from the UK on October 6, as well as a welcome drink, a five-day tennis programme and an experienced Solos Tour Leader. : A seven-night, all-inclusive Corfu Tennis trip costs £1,995pp including flights and transfers from the UK on October 6, as well as a welcome drink, a five-day tennis programme and an experienced Solos Tour Leader. Call 020 8951 2900 or see 5. City Of Dreams Mediterranean LIMASSOL, CYPRUS WITH a Serve & Stay package at the City of Dreams Mediterranean, you'll be able to hone your skills and improve on your weaknesses under the eagle eye of skilled coaches. Each stay includes several days of training at the Marcos Baghdatis Tennis Academy, all of which is overseen by the former world number eight himself. 6 The Serve & Stay package at the City of Dreams Mediterranean is great for honing your skills Credit: Melco Resorts Participants will receive personalised consultations and tailor-made programmes. Outside of training, you're free to unwind in five-star luxury in the city of Limassol. Music fans are in luck as the hotel puts on live performances in the evenings, while the days can be spent learning to surf on the resort's Waverider simulator. Or guests can just take a cooling dip in one of three outdoor swimming pools. GO : A four-night Serve & Stay getaway costs €1,565pp (£1,330) on selected days in September and October and on a half-board basis. : A four-night Serve & Stay getaway costs €1,565pp (£1,330) on selected days in September and October and on a half-board basis. The package includes three days of tennis training, unlimited soft drinks, water and coffee during dinner. See Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.

Moment axe-wielding anti tourist mob surrounds Brits in Majorca chanting ‘go home' & ‘go to hell' sparking cop scuffle
Moment axe-wielding anti tourist mob surrounds Brits in Majorca chanting ‘go home' & ‘go to hell' sparking cop scuffle

Scottish Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Moment axe-wielding anti tourist mob surrounds Brits in Majorca chanting ‘go home' & ‘go to hell' sparking cop scuffle

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS is the terrifying moment anti-tourist protesters swarmed a table of dining Brits and chanted "go home" and "go to hell". Officers were called to reports of the ambush in central Palma on Sunday afternoon, where demonstrators mobbed groups of tourists enjoying a meal in the Majorcan sun. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 One protester was seen wielding an axe Credit: Solarpix 6 Mass anti-tourism protests have erupted across Spain over the last few months Credit: Reuters 6 Tourists enjoying a meal in the town centre were struck with loud chants Credit: Reuters One protester was even caught wielding an axe amid the deafening jeers. Mass anti-tourism protests started erupting across Spain last year, amid concerns holidaymakers were driving rising costs and job insecurity. In a video shared online, protesters are seen jeering at tourists whilst holding placards inscribed with the words: "Mallorca is not for sale" and "Mallorca is not your cash home". Demonstrators are also heard shouting: "As you come I have to go" and "No balconing" - a reference to the drunken craze of jumping off balconies into swimming pools. Regional governors have since criticised the group of noisy activists who turned up banging drums and later surrounded the upmarket eatery Cappuccino Borné. Hotel chain boss Gabriel Llobera also condemned the incident, calling the protests unfair on local businesses accommodating the tourists. He said: 'The tourists that were targeted were sat on terraces provided by business leaders who to be able to receive them have paid their taxes and done things correctly. 'We condemn the anti-social acts we saw yesterday.' Today, the Balearic Islands Government vice-president Antoni Costa called the behaviour "unacceptable" on a local radio station, but insisted the mob only made up a small minority of the Balearic people. He said: 'This type of behaviour is not acceptable. This government condemns and rejects the actions of a small minority of people who rebuked tourists who were relaxing on a terrace having a drink or eating.' He added: 'Abandoning tourism would be madness. We're a tourist economy and we're proud to be so. Anti-tourist protesters blast holidaymakers with water guns & block hotels 'I think people are deluding themselves if they think that in the Balearic Islands it's possible to do mostly other things than tourism. 'What guarantees the future of tourism is to taking into account the social and environmental sustainability factor. Looking the other way is not the right way to go. 'We must implement policies that allow us to move from an economy that basically grows in volume to an economy that grows in value.' Yesterday's march in Palma followed a similar string of incidents in Barcelona, where an anti-tourist mob surrounded a hotel and shot at holidaymakers with water pistols. Congregating outside the hotel, the group launched flares and held placards claiming tourism was robbing them of their futures. What is overtourism? Overtourism refers to the phenomenon where a destination experiences a volume of tourists that exceeds its manageable capacity The term is often used to describe the negative consequences of mass tourism, which includes overcrowding and environmental issues As a result, popular destinations have become less enjoyable for both visitors and locals Local communities, in particular, bear the brunt, facing rising costs and a depletion of resources In response, national and local governments have started to implement measures to reduce overtourism Some solutions include: Safeguarding historical and heritage sites Promoting off-peak travel Tourism caps and regulations Promoting lesser-known destinations Staff at a nearby hotel were seen trying to break up the crowds and shouting at protesters to move away. Police stepped in before protesters could reach the famous tourist hot-spot la Sagrada Familia, avoiding potential clashes between holidaymakers and locals. Shouts of 'Tourists Go Home' and 'One More Tourist, One Less Local' could be heard as activists marched through the streets. They were also heard shouting: 'This tourism is terrorism.' City police said only 600 people had taken part, far less than the 8,000 who took part in the protest in Palma. Other marches took place in the Basque city of San Sebastian, several cities in Italy and in Lisbon as part of a co-ordinated series of street protests in southern Europe. This comes as thousands flooded the streets of the Canary Islands in May. Demonstrations took place across the Spanish archipelago's islands, including Tenerife, Lanzarote, Gran Canaria and Fuerteventura. The march carried the slogan: "The Canary Islands are not for sale, they are loved and defended." Other banners read: "The Canary Islands have a limit and so does our patience" and "Enough is enough!" Spain's anti-mass tourism movement began gaining serious momentum in April 2024 - particularly in popular tourist destinations. Locals have been demanding an end to the problems associated with mass tourism, including pollution, traffic chaos, the lack of affordable housing and low wages for tourism workers. 6 Demonstrators used water pistols during a protest against mass tourism in Barcelona Credit: Reuters 6 People were caught spraying tourists eating meals Credit: The Mega Agency

'No space for Bezos': Venetians protest Amazon founder's grandiose wedding plan
'No space for Bezos': Venetians protest Amazon founder's grandiose wedding plan

NBC News

time20 hours ago

  • NBC News

'No space for Bezos': Venetians protest Amazon founder's grandiose wedding plan

As Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his fiancée, Lauren Sánchez, prepare for a lavish, star-studded wedding in Venice, not everyone in the Italian city is happy about the impending nuptials. "No space for Bezos," a sign read at a protest by residents who say the famed canal city is already overrun by tourists, billionaires, or otherwise. Protesters say their issue is with the happy couple and authorities, like Venice Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who said he was "ashamed" by the protests. "We want to send a very clear message: The ones who should be ashamed are them," protester Federica Toninello told Reuters. "They are the people who have destroyed this city." Venice's two-square-mile main island and historic center, home to about 50,000 people, receives about 20 million visitors yearly, mostly day-trippers from cruise ships or other cities. While tourism is central to Venice's economy and cultural identity, critics say it has displaced residents and damaged historic sites. Venetians' wedding wariness comes as demonstrators across Southern Europe rallied over the weekend against mass tourism. Residents protested on the Spanish island of Mallorca and in Spanish cities such as Barcelona — where tourists were spritzed with water guns — as well as in Venice and Lisbon, the capital of Portugal. Officials in Venice are aware of the problem, and last year Brugnaro introduced a daily entrance fee of 5 euros ($5.79). But Brugnaro and others are rolling out the red carpet for Bezos, the world's fourth-richest person after fellow tech titans Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Larry Ellison, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Brugnaro said Bezos had "achieved great things on a global level" and that the city was "extremely proud" to host him. "It is an honor that he is coming to Venice," he said. Though details of the Bezos-Sánchez wedding are top secret, according to Vogue, the guest list could include celebrities such as Eva Longoria, Katy Perry — Sánchez's crewmate on an April spaceflight by Bezos' Blue Origin — and at least some of the Kardashians. In a statement to NBC News, city hall officials said regular taxi and water transports would continue during the wedding festivities, which are reportedly set to begin June 24. Officials said only about 30 of the 280 water taxis have been reserved, and only three or four hotels will be used for the event. "The city is fully accustomed to hosting high-profile events of this nature and scale, including other celebrity weddings, international summits such as the G7 and G20, as well as traditional events like the Festa del Redentore and the Venice Biennale," the statement said. City officials added that "the celebrations, attended by 250 guests, will blend into the daily rhythm of a city that, with dignity and respect, welcomes thousands of visitors from around the world while safeguarding the quality of life for its residents, workers, and students." "Protest initiatives are in no way representative of the majority of citizens, who are proud that Venice has been chosen as the wedding location," the statement added. Amal Alamuddin.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store