How to Survive After a Shipwreck: 14 Steps (2024)

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1Getting Organized

2Cooperating with Others

3Staying Alive on the Water

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Last Updated: July 2, 2024References

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While most people won’t ever be shipwrecked, it is a small possibility for people who do travel by water. In addition to the danger of dying when the ship sinks, there are many dangers after you’ve survived the initial sinking. Possible dangers include exposure, sharks, and more. However, by getting organized, cooperating with others, and taking steps to aid in your rescue, you’ll have much better odds of surviving a shipwreck. With some hard work and luck, you’ll survive this stressful ordeal.

Part 1

Part 1 of 3:

Getting Organized

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  1. 1

    Stay calm. Perhaps the most important thing to surviving a shipwreck is staying calm. This is even more important in the first chaotic moments in a tragedy at sea. If you don’t stay calm, you could put yourself in more risk.

    • If you find yourself panicking, tell yourself to relax and breathe deeply.
    • Think before you act. Don’t just run to the first life boat, or jump into the water at the first sight of danger. Consider all your options.
  2. 2

    Find a flotation device. As the craft you’re on is sinking, you should make it your primary goal to find some sort of flotation device. Without a flotation device, you probably won’t survive for very long in the water. Some devices include:

    • Life preservers.
    • Solid life boats.
    • Inflatable rafts.

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  3. 3

    Jump from the craft if you are in danger. If you must jump from a boat, make sure to keep your shoes on. Look down before you jump to make sure you don’t land on other people or objects. Place one of your arms on your abdomen. Then, grasp your opposite elbow. Use the opposite hand to hold your nose closed. Finally, jump as far off as you can. As you fall, cross your legs and try to enter the water with your feet first.

  4. 4

    Get away from the boat, if it is large. Large ships tend to create a suction effect and suck things down with them as they sink. As a result, the larger the vessel, the farther you should get away from it as it sinks. This is important, as large boats can bring you down even if you’re wearing a life preserver.

    • Use the breaststroke to swim away from the boat.
    • Kick strongly with your legs.
    • If you don't know how to swim very well, stay calm, tread water, and slowly paddle away from the sinking ship.
  5. 5

    Find something to help you stay afloat. If you don’t have a life preserver, raft, or something else to float on, look around the area of the shipwreck for any debris you could use to stay afloat. There are many possible items that you could use, such as:

    • A door.
    • Pieces of the boat that are still floating.
    • Spare lifeboats or life preservers that aren’t being used.
  6. 6

    Look to see if you are injured. After you’re a safe distance from the boat, you should take a quick look at yourself to see if you’re injured or not. This is important, as you could need immediate medical attention. Pay attention to whether:

    • You’re bleeding. If so, and the wound is bad, you may need to use a tourniquet to stop loss of blood. This is important, as blood loss could fasten the pace at which hypothermia sets in.
    • You have a broken limb. A broken limb could seriously inhibit your ability to swim. If you have one, you’ll need to immediately ask for the assistance of another survivor.
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Part 2

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Cooperating with Others

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  1. 1

    Help others. After you’ve checked yourself and found a way to keep yourself afloat, see if you can offer assistance to other survivors who may need help. Other survivors could be in serious distress and need immediate help.[1]

    • Assist others who may be in shock. Talk to them, tell them things will be okay, and let them know you are there to help them.
    • Treat people who have concussions.
  2. 2

    Organize your group. After you’ve adjusted to your new status, you need to talk to everyone in your group and get them organized. Survivors in your group may have knowledge, expertise, or ideas about how to increase your survival chances and get rescued.[2]

    • Stay together. Your chances of surviving and being rescued are a lot higher if your group is organized and stays together.
  3. 3

    Signal for help. If you cannot recover from the capsizing, signal distress.Use your distress signals (audio, visual, electronic). For consumable signals, don’t use them all at once, you don’t know how long you could be stuck. There are many possible items that you could use, such as:

    • Your personal locator beacon (PLB).
    • Marine radio or whistle.
    • Flares or anything you have to signal for help.
  4. 4

    Look for supplies. After you and other survivors have found a way to stay afloat, start organizing and gathering supplies. Ultimately, the more supplies you have and the better you manage them, the longer you’ll be able to survive until you are rescued. Pay special attention to:

    • Fresh water. Store and ration your fresh water as well as you can.
    • Food.
    • Signal flares and other items you could signal rescuers with.
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Part 3

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Staying Alive on the Water

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  1. 1

    Avoid hypothermia. Next to drowning, hypothermia is the biggest threat to your survivor after a shipwreck. This is because exposure to cold water will lower your body temperature. If your body temperature gets too low, your body will eventually shut down and you will die.

    • If you’re in the water with a flotation device and not on a raft, hug your knees to your chest. This will help maintain body warmth.
    • If you’re with others in the water or in a raft, stay close together, and hug each other.
    • Keep your clothes on. Even if they’re soaked, they’ll help maintain your body temperature.
  2. 2

    Watch for sharks. Next to hyperthermia and drowning, one of the biggest dangers on the open water are sharks. Sharks are especially dangerous around shipwrecks because they’re attracted to blood from injured people and by the fish that gather around floating objects on the surface of the water.

    • Avoid splashing around. This will minimize the attention that you draw to yourself and your group.
    • If someone has an open wound, do your best to stop the bleeding. Blood will draw fish and sharks from great distances.[3]
  3. 3

    Look for land. Once you’re relatively safe and stable on the water, you should look start to look for land. If you don’t find land, you’re chances of survival will drop every day as your supplies slowly disappear. There are many ways you can find land:

    • Estimate your position based on your last known position. You can do this using charts, maps, or the stars.
    • Look for signs of land like the presence of birds, driftwood, or trash. If you see birds, look at the direction they come from and fly toward.
    • Try to visually spot land on the horizon. Depending on you distance, it could be hard to spot, but you should try.[4]
  4. 4

    Create drinking water. If you find yourself in need of water and have a few basic supplies, you may be able to create some. Take a plastic tarp and set it out across your raft or lifeboat. Use it to collect rainwater. In addition, if there isn’t rain, you may be able to collect condensation off of it in the morning.[5]

    • Never drink salt water. It will dehydrate you. Instead, turn salt water into drinking water.
  5. 5

    Signal rescuers. Whether you’re on a boat, floating on the water, or on land, you should try to signal rescuers as often as is possible. Without a signal, rescuers may not be able to spot you and other survivors after a shipwreck. Some methods of signaling include:

    • Shooting a flare gun. Depending on how many flares you have, you may want to save these for when you see a boat or aircraft passing in the distance.
    • A mirror. Use a mirror to reflect the sun toward a possible search craft.
    • A fire. If you’re on land, light a fire to gain the attention of rescuers.
    • Building a sign or some other sort of structure on a beach. For instance, create a “SOS” sign with coconuts or driftwood.[6]
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Expert Q&A

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  • Question

    What is the best thing to wear in case of evacuation into a lifeboat?

    Jonas DeMuro, MD
    Board Certified Critical Care Surgeon

    Dr. DeMuro is a board certified Pediatric Critical Care Surgeon in New York. He received his MD from Stony Brook University School of Medicine in 1996. He completed his fellowship in Surgical Critical Care at North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System and was a previous American College of Surgeons (ACS) Fellow.

    Jonas DeMuro, MD

    Board Certified Critical Care Surgeon

    Expert Answer

    The most important is your life vest, in case you are thrown into the water. Ideally, you should dress in layers to be prepared for temperature changes.

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      Tips

      • If you haven't taken swimming lessons before going on a boat, it would be advisable to learn.

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      • Large ships such as cruise liners can take hours or even days to sink and, in order to be rescued quickly, it's best to remain with the ship unless the crew has advised otherwise.

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      • Always put a life jacket on at the first sign of sinking and try to have a long sleeved top and long pants on to help with warmth.

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      Warnings

      • If the inside of the ship is flooding quickly, do not inflate your life jacket until you are outside. Otherwise, you might float to the top and be trapped.

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      About This Article

      How to Survive After a Shipwreck: 14 Steps (38)

      Co-authored by:

      wikiHow Staff

      wikiHow Staff Writer

      This article was co-authored by wikiHow Staff. Our trained team of editors and researchers validate articles for accuracy and comprehensiveness. wikiHow's Content Management Team carefully monitors the work from our editorial staff to ensure that each article is backed by trusted research and meets our high quality standards. This article has been viewed 162,241 times.

      93 votes - 82%

      Co-authors: 53

      Updated: July 2, 2024

      Views:162,241

      Categories: Featured Articles | Outdoor Safety

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      How to Survive After a Shipwreck: 14 Steps (2024)

      FAQs

      How to survive after a shipwreck? ›

      10 Things to remember if you're shipwrecked
      1. Shelter yourself. ...
      2. Do not drink urine. ...
      3. Do not eat jellyfish. ...
      4. Turtles are an easy catch and make for excellent meals. ...
      5. If a castaway is injured, beware of well-meaning but ill-founded medical treatment. ...
      6. Put your feet up at least 5 minutes every hour.
      7. Do not go swimming.
      Jul 11, 2010

      What is the lost at sea survival task? ›

      Your task is to rank the fifteen items below in terms of their importance to your survival. Place the number 1 by the most important item, the number 2 by the second most important, and so on through number 15, the least important. You will do this twice: once alone (10 min.) and once as a group (20 min.).

      What would you do if you were shipwrecked? ›

      Find something to help you stay afloat.

      If you don't have a life preserver, raft, or something else to float on, look around the area of the shipwreck for any debris you could use to stay afloat. There are many possible items that you could use, such as: A door. Pieces of the boat that are still floating.

      What are the most important items if lost at sea? ›

      Items to Have before Heading out for Sea:

      A GPS, first-aid kit, blankets, towline, some non-perishable food, and lots and lots of water. Each of these things can become very useful when situations go bad and can be easily stored inside a storage box.

      How do people survive a sinking ship? ›

      Without pushing or shoving, find a lifejacket, put it on before helping anyone else, and get yourself on a lifeboat in an orderly fashion. You can decide whether you let women and children on the boats first – but know that the longer you stay aboard, the lower your chances of survival.

      Can you drink salt water if lost at sea? ›

      Drinking seawater can be deadly to humans.

      When humans drink seawater, their cells are thus taking in water and salt. While humans can safely ingest small amounts of salt, the salt content in seawater is much higher than what can be processed by the human body.

      What is the longest someone has survived lost at sea? ›

      The longest known time which anyone has survived adrift at sea is approximately 484 days, by the Japanese Captain Oguri Jukichi and one of his sailors Otokichi.

      How a man survived 76 days at sea? ›

      After exhausting the meagre food supplies he had salvaged from the sinking sloop, Callahan survived by "learning to live like an aquatic caveman". He ate primarily mahi-mahi as well as triggerfish, which he speared, along with flying fish, barnacles, and birds that he captured.

      What is the biggest danger to survivors at sea? ›

      Dangers to Survivors
      • Heat Stroke, Sun Stroke, Exposure to Cold and Hypothermia. In warm or tropical climates, excessive exposure to the sun and heat can cause terrible cases of sunburn and hyperthermia (or heatstroke). ...
      • Accelerated Water Loss. Several things will cause an accelerated water loss from the body. ...
      • Reduce Drift.

      What are 5 things you need to survive on a deserted island? ›

      The ultimate island survival checklist: 10 essentials to pack for your deserted adventure
      • A knife. ...
      • A fishing net. ...
      • A giant box of matches. ...
      • A hammock. ...
      • A can of bug spray. ...
      • A bottle of sunblock. ...
      • An inflatable raft with rows. ...
      • A flashlight.
      Feb 19, 2023

      What happens to a body in a shipwreck? ›

      Once your dead body enters the water it starts. The choicest meaty parts will be consumed quite quickly by predators such as sharks and grouper. Once the body releases its gasses and drifts to the bottom, others take over. If not too deep, it's lobsters, prawns and crabs.

      What are the odds of surviving a shipwreck? ›

      Shipwreck survival rates are about 20–35%. Being properly prepared and having the strength, health, and knowledge to survive greatly increases the chances of survival in a long term isolation situation.

      Can you keep what you find on a shipwreck? ›

      Can I keep pieces or artifacts from a shipwreck? No. The Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act of 1972, which mostly regulates ocean dumping, also covers archaeological removal of submerged cultural resources. It's illegal to disturb a site or take things from it without a permit.

      What happens to your body when you are lost at sea? ›

      When the water and air are warm, the primary problem is dehydration. Death due to dehydration occurs when you lose about 15–20% of your body weight in fluid. Even at 5% dehydration you can get headaches, become irritable and feel lightheaded.

      What to bring on a shipwreck? ›

      Essential Grab Bag Items
      • Passport, cash/credit cards and ship's log/papers.
      • Handheld VHF.
      • Drinking water.
      • Flares.
      • First Aid Kit/Medication.
      • Food.
      • Navigation tools.
      • Knife.

      How long do bodies last in shipwrecks? ›

      Although biological activity results in advanced decomposition within 12 years, even in cases of the most durable skeletal parts (Cunningham and Tolson 2010), some human bones on shipwrecks are preserved if and when the body became trapped below deck – for instance, beneath a cannon or the cargo.

      Can you recover a shipwreck? ›

      An entire ship can be recovered from deep water when economically viable in some special cases, or because it is easier to recover the whole vessel intact than to try to recover the targeted items on their own.

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