Emergencies at seaMore than 32 operations and 75 people rescued

Night-time operation in Eckernförde Bay: a sailing boat capsized due to a squall. The sea rescue team immediately rescued the couple from the water.
Photo: Die Seenotretter - DGzRS
​More than 75 people found themselves in distress at sea last weekend: the DGzRS crews were called out to more than 32 incidents. Press spokesman Christian Stipeldey explains what situations triggered the emergency calls and why conditions on the water can become dangerous particularly quickly in summer. It wasn’t just the Baltic Sea that was affected – severe weather also led to further emergencies in other regions of Germany.

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Sea rescue services were in high demand this weekend across numerous areas within the DGzRS’s area of responsibility in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. Around 60 rescue cruisers and boats carried out more than 32 operations between Friday and Sunday lunchtime, rescuing a total of 75 people. The main focus was on the western Baltic Sea. This is confirmed by Christian Stipeldey. “We had 19 operations in Schleswig-Holstein, seven in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and six in Lower Saxony.”

According to the press officer, the reasons for the call-outs break down as follows: technical problems and engine failures were recorded on eleven occasions. “A technical problem can quickly turn into a dangerous situation,” explains Stipeldey. “That’s why it’s all the more important that we arrive on the scene quickly.” In addition, there were nine vessels that had become stuck or run aground. In four cases, the sea rescue team had to carry out patient transport and medical evacuations. In the Rescue and capsizing The DGzRS was on duty until late into the night following an incident involving a sailing yacht. There was also a boat that was adrift and unable to manoeuvre. “We were also involved in the search for six missing swimmers,” says Stipeldey, adding: “It is often the case that when the weather changes suddenly and without prior warning, many people are out and about and may be caught off guard by the weather.” Particularly in summer, changeable weather conditions, including Thunderstorm and Heat become risks.


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According to the press officer, the sea rescue service experiences at least one or two weekends a year with such a high number of emergencies. “Up to 40 call-outs can easily be reported within two days. This weekend, we rescued 75 people. This figure is also realistic for other weekends,” he estimates.

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Couple in distress at sea

At 10.30 pm on 27 June, a woman reported from the shore that a sailing boat was adrift off Langholz in the municipality of Waabs. The Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centre (MRCC) in Bremen immediately alerted the rescue boat “Eckernförde”. The crew arrived at the scene about half an hour later and found that there were two people on board. A married couple had moored their boat to a buoy during a severe thunderstorm and sought shelter below deck. However, the mooring did not hold. Due to the dangerous thunderstorm conditions, the sea rescue team decided to tow the boat, with the sailors still on board, to Eckernförde.

Boat breaks loose during a thunderstorm

About 20 minutes after the tow began, another violent thunderstorm swept across Eckernförde Bay. Strong gusts of up to force 10 – more than 100 kilometres per hour – hit the sailing boat that was being towed. One such gust caused the boat to capsize, and both sailors fell into the Baltic Sea. The sea rescue team reacted immediately and rescued the pair in no time at all, before they could be swept away.

The DGzRS called in the rescue cruiser “Berlin” from the Laboe station to assist. The crew included a maritime emergency doctor. As the two shipwrecked people were in good condition, there was no need to provide them with further medical care. The sea rescue team took the couple to the port of Eckernförde. The ‘Steppke’, the ‘Berlin’s’ auxiliary vessel, took over the towing operation. During this, there was once again heavy rain and a thunderstorm. It was not until 3 am on Sunday night that the crews were back at their respective stations.

The See Rescue Coordination Centre is staffed round the clock and can be contacted on VHF channels 16 and 70, as well as on the borderwave frequency of 2187.5 kilohertz.

Operations on Lake Constance

​Powerful thunderstorm cells over eastern Switzerland triggered a violent storm on Sunday evening, which swept across the eastern part of Lake Constance. The yellow Storm warning lights along the shores of Lake Constance The warning was displayed in advance with 90 flashes per minute. Nevertheless, several boats found themselves in distress. A sailing yacht ran aground off the Therme in Lindau. At the same time, a motorboat that was unable to manoeuvre was reported in the same region. The Lindau Fire Brigade, the Water Rescue Service and the Lindau THW, together with emergency services from Austria, were deployed for the cross-border rescue operation. The emergency services secured both boats and subsequently towed the motorboat into Lindau harbour.

​There was another major operation off the Wasserburg peninsula. A sailing boat broke free from its mooring buoy and was eventually pushed ashore by the strong swell. The Wasserburg Fire Brigade and the Lindau THW secured the damaged boat. Using the THW’s loading crane, the emergency services lifted the sailing boat out of the water to prevent any potential environmental hazard to Lake Constance caused by leaking fuel. The fire brigades from Lindau and Wasserburg, the water rescue service, the Lindau THW and emergency services from Austria were on the scene for several hours. According to current information, there were no injuries.

Yacht on fire in Warnemünde

​An 8.45-metre-long sailing yacht caught fire on Sunday near the passenger quay in Warnemünde Fire, whilst the 47-year-old skipper escaped unharmed. The fire broke out shortly after 1 pm. The yacht had originally been travelling from Kühlungsborn towards Rostock’s city harbour. A cloud of black smoke was visible even from a considerable distance. Several emergency calls were received by the emergency services. The fire brigade was assisted by the German Armed Forces fire brigade and a civil protection boat. Together, it took them an hour to Fire under control The police suspect that a technical fault was the cause of the fire, but are still investigating the possibility of negligent arson.


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Leonie Meyer

Leonie Meyer

Editor News & Panorama

Leonie Meyer was born in Detmold in 1997. The passion for boating runs in her family: every year they spend their summer holidays in Croatia with their boat. Even as a child, she leafed through her father's BOOTE magazine.

After training as a design assistant at school, she moved to Magdeburg to study International Journalism. During this time, she completed an internship abroad at a German daily newspaper in Greece and an internship at BOOTE magazine. After graduating with a BA (2020), Leonie did a graduate internship in Mallorca. Her last stop was a cross-media traineeship at a daily newspaper in OWL. Leonie Meyer has been working as an editor in the watersports digital editorial team since 2023 and turned her passion into a career.

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