It also says he had a VHF with him.
21 August 2025
Selsey RNLI launched to Man overboard from yacht
UK Coastguard received an emergency alert from a Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) indicating a man overboard from a yacht approximately four nautical miles south from Chichester harbour entrance.
Both Selsey and Bembridge all-weather lifeboats were requested to launch.
The Selsey All-weather lifeboat (ALB) launched at 4.20pm and requested straight away to locate the yacht the man had come off as it was now sailing with no persons onboard.
Bembridge ALB was tasked to recover the man from a yacht which had responded to PLB alert and were able to recover the man from the water within 15 minutes of falling over the side.
At 4.32pm Selsey ALB found the yacht 2.2nm southwest from Selsey Bill and at 4.36pm transferred two lifeboat crewmembers to the vessel to take control.
The Coxswain decided to transfer a third crewmember to the yacht to assist with the sails so the yacht could be sailed towards Chichester harbour with the ALB escorting.
After medically assessing the casualty and declaring him not needing hospital treatment the Bembridge ALB brought him to the Selsey ALB and transferred him.
The Bembridge ALB returned to station.
As the yacht and lifeboat arrived off Chichester harbour the skipper of the yacht was transferred back to his yacht.
Both vessels entered Chichester harbour at 5. 55pm and the yacht was placed on a visitor mooring.
This was reported to the Coastguard who were happy to release the Selsey ALB.
At 6.35pm the ALB departed Chichester Harbour bound for Selsey.
Coxswain Colin Pullenger said ‘ almost exactly a week ago today we recovered a yachtsman alive from the water after 4.5hrs wearing just shorts after his yacht came ashore, today a yachtsman has been recovered within 15 minutes of entering the water wearing a lifejacket with a PLB and handheld VHF radio attached’
At 7.10pm the ALB arrived back at Selsey and was recovered straight away.
I find the response time really quite difficult to rationalise. I’m not familiar with the area, but the Bembridge boat looks to have had to travel at least 4nm so that’s 10mins flat out. Did it really only take 5 mins to receive the PLB, request the the lifeboat, set the pagers off, travel to the lifeboat house, change and launch?
This could mean an AIS MOB device, or that he included something to the effect of "I sail solo; if this goes off I'm likely overboard" in the beacon registration notes. At only four miles from the harbour it could be either, and the former would allow the nearby vessel to move quickly on its ownUK Coastguard received an emergency alert from a Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) indicating a man overboard from a yacht approximately four nautical miles south from Chichester harbour entrance.
This could mean an AIS MOB device, or that he included something to the effect of "I sail solo; if this goes off I'm likely overboard" in the beacon registration notes. At only four miles from the harbour it could be either, and the former would allow the nearby vessel to move quickly on its own
The COSPAS-SARSAT system is much improved in recent years, but even so I'm not sure the beacon location would be considered resolved that quickly.
Or they saw him fall.My money is the MOB's HH VHF.
This is slightly ambiguous as it could mean the yacht or the ALB recovered the MOB from the water. I’m a big supporter of the RNLI but not such a big supporter of their reporting at times.Bembridge ALB was tasked to recover the man from a yacht which had responded to PLB alert and were able to recover the man from the water within 15 minutes of falling over the side.
I often mutter away to myself about the reporting of "local" lifeboat launches. The press officer is just another volunteer though, probably working with half the facts. They need to produce a brief press statement to get media coverage which requires the format and detail to be conscise - it needs to go out in a timely fashion and whilst the press officer might not be quite as urgently demanded as the crew they were probably not sitting with nothing else to do. The RNLI's objective is really to get media attention that says "please donate to help our heros", whereas the interesting fact on this story, for all the yachty readers, was that the RNLI didn't save a life here - a passing yacht did. I often note out local lifeboat reports the time from launch to on scene, and the exact time the boat got back to the station but often doesn't state the time from first call to CG (which of course they might not know) to launch.This is slightly ambiguous as it could mean the yacht or the ALB recovered the MOB from the water. I’m a big supporter of the RNLI but not such a big supporter of their reporting at times.
My money is the MOB's HH VHF.
His kit is shown in an image on FB - an ocean signal MOB1 and a small VHF. I don't doubt that the VHF was probably what got the attention. Interesting that the article by the Lifeboats refers to the MOB1 as a PLB. I guess it is a form of personal location beacon, but PLB typically refers to a small EPIRB, whereas the MOB1 is a AIS/DSC beacon. I wonder if he got the boat's attention with the VHF, and then they used his location on the AIS to actually find him?
Yep, that would do it, not much time delay as with a PLB either. Functionality for the UK is "AIS + DSC Individual Distress Relay call only", so decently equipped vessels should have an MOB icon on the plotter to steer for.His kit is shown in an image on FB - an ocean signal MOB1 and a small VHF.