![]() |
JUNEAU -- Despite uncontrollable shivering and swarming mosquitoes, former state legislator Bruce Weyhrauch says he never thought about the possibility of dying during the 17 hours he spent wet, cold and missing after falling off his boat and swimming to a nearby island in the icy waters of Auke Bay.
Weyhrauch said that keeping warm was his first priority. But thoughts about his tight-knit family and the belief that someone was watching over him kept him going, he said in a telephone interview Tuesday from his home.Weyhrauch, 54, is recovering from hypothermia. He fell into the 43-degree waters of the bay, about 15 miles north of Juneau, Sunday evening after slipping and losing his balance while alone on his boat. He recalled he swam for about an hour before reaching Coghlan Island, where he spent the night fighting off biting mosquitoes and cold. His family reported the former member of the Alaska House and practicing Juneau attorney missing Sunday night, after the Coast Guard found his Boston Whaler abandoned but with its engine still running. A long search began, and Weyhrauch was located on the sandy shore of the island Monday morning at about 11 a.m."I didn't want to anticipate rescue," he said. "There's no manual for how to do this. I just had to maintain being calm, look at options, and then make the decision and do it."Weyhrauch said he set out swimming for Coghlan Island after realizing his boat was moving too fast to catch. He swam with his back away from the island to keep the cold water from rushing into his body's core. He kept his arms as close to his side as possible, he said, in order to try to retain body heat. The position caused him to swim like the cartoon character Nemo, he said.His feet and legs cramped early on in the swim, while his arms weakened to the point of uselessness. When he finally made it to the shore, he had no energy left and let a wave give him the final push to land.After resting on the sandy beach for some time, Weyhrauch, said he stumbled into the woods.Daily News reporter Sabra Ayres can be reached at sayres@adn.com.