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Survival on the Missouri

A man inside a waterfowl hunting blind looking out.
Todd Mills waterfowl hunts near Grand Island. Photo by Jeff Kurrus, Nebraskaland Magazine

By Todd Mills, as told by Jeff Kurrus

It was Nov. 30, 1998. Three of my childhood friends were coming back to duck hunt – a tradition we had done since the mid-1980s. I’ve known one since kindergarten, the rest of them fifth and sixth grade, more than 50 years. We grew up hunting together with BB guns, so we spent a lot of time in the field getting to know one another. This probably had a lot to do with the fact we’re still alive.

We were hunting on the Missouri River, and it was a very mild day – 48 degrees. When we finished our hunt, we decided to scout. We were coming back from a little pothole near the main channel of the river toward the Santee boat ramp. We had four guys, two dogs and a pile of decoys in a 14-foot john boat with a wooden blind on top of it; we’d hunted out of it for several years. We weren’t thinking about our weight, or what could happen if your boat is overloaded, or if you’re not in the right place inside the boat.

I said, “Let’s go down one more channel, check one spot and then we’ll turn around and come back.” Then, at the last minute, we decided we weren’t going to do it. I was in the back of the boat, running the tiller, and the rest of the guys were in front. I stopped, then began to turn around in a little bay.

As I did, one of the guys in the front of the boat said, “Get the bucket.” That’s the last thing I remember before our boat turned upside down. So, in a matter of 30 seconds, we went from tooling down the river to being underwater.

Looking back, several things were wrong.

It was getting cold, and we were trying to get the boat tipped upright. When we finally got it turned back over, we got as much water out as we possibly could. At that point, I couldn’t get the motor started, so we agreed that once we got enough water out to float the boat, we had to get it across to another island, and across a channel, so we could start walking the boat up. Because we still had our shotguns – they had suctioned underneath the boat as well – we also tried to fire a couple of distress shots, which was to no avail. I didn’t have any sort of flare in the boat. We were completely unprepared. So we decided to cross the channel with two oars and our weight as evenly distributed as we could, with no life jackets and water two inches from the top of the boat.

When we got to the other side, I did whatever I could to get the motor to run. In the meantime, the one guy wearing polyester took a rope at the front of the boat and started walking us around the island. We had probably a half-mile of channel to get to another bigger channel to get to the boat ramp. Obviously, everyone was colder. If it had been a normal, Nov. 30 kind of day, we would’ve all died from hypothermia.

But we finally got the boat all the way to the point. We were still a long way from the boat ramp, but there was a kid who rode up on a bike. We fired two or three more distress shots but he didn’t even acknowledge it. So we huddled as closely as we could in the middle of the cattails to provide some sort of heat to one another. I kept working on the motor and, finally, got it started. Broken prop, but it started.

We decided that another person and I would get across the channel to the boat ramp, drain the boat, then come back for the others. When we got to the ramp, some guys came down and we asked them to get help, and they said they would. But they never came back. This was before cell phones, so we couldn’t call anyone for help. We were also terribly dehydrated.

But somehow, that was the first time I really felt like we were going to be OK. A little while later, after leaving one buddy at the ramp, just in case, I tooled back across. It took two more trips but I got the other two back to the boat ramp.

In the years since, I’ve thought a lot about this day. How any number of slight differences would have changed the outcome for the worse. I can only shake my head at our ignorance, and how the good Lord was definitely looking down on us. 


Survival Tips

If you hunt, fish, or participate in any other outdoor activities, it’s not a matter of “if” you get in a dangerous spot, it’s “when.” Apply these tips to your outdoor ventures.

  • Wear your life jacket. If the boat would have flipped over 10 yards before it did, we would have been in the main channel and dead because we weren’t wearing our life jackets. I rarely see a duck hunter leaving the boat ramp with a life jacket on – a big mistake.

  • Tell someone where you are. There were always people hunting on that stretch of river, but that day there weren’t. Let someone know where you are at all times and have the local conservation officer’s number with you.

  • Don’t overload your boat. Follow your boat’s guidelines and evenly distribute weight. We didn’t and it nearly cost us.

  • Bring extra clothes. Always have extra clothes in your boat, even if it’s a warm day. And remember to stay away from cotton. We prefer polyester.

  • Never leash your dogs to the boat. This gives them no chance to survive if something goes wrong.

  • Don’t remove boat flotation. Many people will take it out to create extra storage. Don’t do it. It probably saved our lives.