Author Topic: Luke Evslin  (Read 7525 times)

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Mermel

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Luke Evslin
« on: October 11, 2010, 03:16PM »
I am sure most or some of you have heard that Luke Evslin of Kamanu Composites was seriously injured in yesterdays Molokai Hoe. This is one of those unfortunate incidents that happen.  I don't know any details I have just read some posts. Below is a mass email that went out. Luke is one of the nicest guys you will meet so please keep your thoughts and prayers with him during his recovery...



As you may have already heard Luke was seriously injured yesterday during the Molokai Hoe when he was pulled under their escort boat prop while it was rotating.

 

At this moment we understand that he received three separate assaults from the blade which tore open his back exposing his spine, and cutting through his back muscles and side.

 

I just spoke with his mother who said he is been upgraded from critical to whatever is below that.  He is in a great deal of pain and is presently on a self administered morphine drip so that he can attempt to keep himself comfortable, and reduce muscle contractions so that he does not re tear himself open.  He is at Maui Memorial Hospital and maybe air vacked to Queens.

 

He is able to be online and has been looking at posts on OC paddler, where you can leave messages for him.

 

It is best not to call him but you can text him at 635-6623, you can also e-mail him funny and encouraging upbeat messages/videos/music at  Luke@Kamanucomposites.com although I am sure it hurts to laugh.

 

His partners must be devastated and scared out of their wits.  This injury could take a long time for him to recover from and we must make sure that his company continues to stay in business during his recovery.  I'm not exactly sure what this means but as a community I know it is something that we can do.

 

We are Canoe Brothers and Sisters, we all love the same thing. We stand by and support each other, because it is who we are.

 

To Luke >  dude you scared the fool out of us.

 

 

Brian Curll
Hui O Mana Ka Puuwai Outrigger Canoe Club Pres.
TriKauai Triathlons Race Director
BOD Get Fit Kauai
BOD Mayors Drug and Alcohol Use Prevention Coalition
808 635-6311

Angie C.

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Re: Luke Evslin
« Reply #1 on: October 11, 2010, 04:16PM »
Was waiting for someone to post on this.  Luke actually replied to well wishers on Facebook. Below is his comment:

From Luke -Like the addict I am, I just got on here to check out the results. After reading this post, I am crying for the first time all day. There is so much love in the paddling community that it's overwhelming. I'm on an iPhone and on h...eavy painkillers, so this might end up incomprehensible.
I wanted to say a couple of things.
This was in no way the escort drivers fault. It was a combination of bad factors that led me to be under the boat.
I'm not sure what the future has, but this really affected my life. It can happen so quickly to anyone out there. You always hear people saying how shocked they are when something really bad happens, that you never thought it would happen to you. It can happen. No matter what were doing, we could all die in a flash. And we should never forget that. I feel like I want to go home and give everyone in the world a hug, especially the paddling community. I am blessed to know a lot of paddlers, and I feel honored to have each of those relationships.
Ive definitely learned from this. Live life to the fullest. Love everyone, especially your friends and family.
Thank you guys for the kind words, I really am still crying.
Huge thank you to don, Hank, Makana, and every single person who helped me along the way. Everyone has been awesome. You guys all saved my life today.
And huge props to Kailua canoe club. Those guys are incredible for ironing the channel.
In a manly way, I really love you all. :)

Chris King

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Re: Luke Evslin
« Reply #2 on: October 11, 2010, 07:41PM »
This is so heavy and unbelievable.....a guy that loves paddling so much that he has devoted his life personally and professionally to it....he is changing the sport with his open class canoes, and his OC-1's/V-1's...add onto it as Mermel noted, such a nice great guy.....a large percentage of our OC-1's on our beach now were created by Luke.....please send your prayers to Luke and his family..
Chris

nmarble

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Re: Luke Evslin
« Reply #3 on: October 12, 2010, 02:15PM »
There is a picture up on facebook, I do not think I will forget to ask if the boat is in neutral again...

MARLA

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Re: Luke Evslin
« Reply #4 on: October 12, 2010, 03:44PM »
the story written up on the incident...

http://thegardenisland.com/sports/recreation/article_9e7a50d6-d5d1-11df-9092-001cc4c002e0.html

LIHU‘E — Kaua‘i native Luke Evslin was seriously injured during the Moloka‘i Hoe canoe race Sunday when he was run over by his crew’s escort boat. He remains in stable condition at Maui Memorial Medical Center, Evslin said Monday afternoon from his hospital bed.
Right when he jumped from the escort boat to make a three-person crew change, a wave hit the boat, sending it overtop of him.
When the bottom of the boat and propeller hit Evslin, 25, he said he thought he had been cut in half and was relieved to reach back and feel much of his body.
“I felt the prop go through me,” he said, noting feeling “pulp” where his back skin used to be.
He swam to the surface and started screaming and the two other paddlers who were supposed to enter the six-person canoe during the partial crew change came to his aid, helping him back into the escort boat, which had quickly turned around to aid the men who were competing in the annual Moloka‘i-to-O‘ahu outrigger canoe race.
Evslin recalls lying on the floor of the boat and, based on the terrified looks on the faces of the boat crew and paddlers, he thought the end was near.
“I was pretty sure I was dying,” he said. The paddlers jumped on his back to provide direct pressure to control the bleeding and later told him they could see his spinal cord, he said.
The ocean was too rough to allow an airlift from the boat, or even his transfer to a larger boat for an emergency evacuation, so the escort boat returned to Hale O Lono Harbor on Moloka‘i. The trip takes around an hour, which he recalled as both the longest 60 minutes of his life and a time to reflect on all his blessings.
“That whole hour seemed like eternity,” he said, noting it gave him time to feel the love surrounding him on the boat and the love of his family from afar.
“I wasn’t scared of death in the slightest,” Evslin said. He felt enveloped by a “feeling of total love.”
When the boat reached Hale O Lono Harbor, paramedics were waiting. He was stabilized at Moloka‘i General Hospital and flown by helicopter to Maui Memorial Medical Center, as the weather was too bad for him to be flown to Honolulu, he said.
On Maui, three surgeons worked on him simultaneously, treating him for the outside wounds to his back and a “knicked” spine, broken pelvis and bruised kidney, but nothing he can’t fully recover from, he said.
Evslin plans to leave the hospital Friday and in three months be back in the ocean, he said. To win his hospital release, all he has to do is prove he can walk with a walker and sit up long enough to make the plane ride from Kahului to either Honolulu or Kaua‘i.
While he lives on O‘ahu now, he is considering rehabilitating on Kaua‘i, he said.
On Monday, he was in stable condition, though he said he lost a lot of blood. He didn’t know how many pints he needed. Also on Monday, he stood up for the first time since the accident, he said.
Evslin is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Lee Evslin of Wailua Homesteads. His fiancé, Sokchea Eng, and Dr. Evslin flew to Maui to be with him.
The escort boat captain also called and visited him. “He’s more shooken up than me,” said Evslin, whose doctors and nurses on Maui have told him their greatest concern is possible infection of the spinal column.
The canoe crew continued on without making the change, so the nine-person crew became a six-man Ironman team slicing through the entire Ka‘iwi Channel, 41 miles, in very difficult conditions.
They were finishing the race before the escort boat got back to them, and the boat’s crew conveyed the news that Evslin had been injured and may not have survived, because at that time they didn’t know his condition, Evslin said.
Brian Curll, president of Wailua’s Hui O Mana Ka Pu‘uwai Outrigger Canoe Club, said he spoke Monday with Evslin’s mother, who detailed the extent of the injuries to his spine, back muscles and side.
“He is in a great deal of pain and is presently on a self-administered morphine drip so that he can attempt to keep himself comfortable and reduce muscle contractions so that he does not re-tear himself,” Curll said in an e-mail.
Curll said Evslin has been able to be online and has looked at posts on www.ocpaddler.com, an ocean paddler website. Well-wishers can leave messages for him at that site.
Carlton Helm, in a post on the website, said Evslin was injured while making the first change off La‘au Point, Moloka‘i.
“He was severely propped and incurred injuries that he stated if it was an inch higher, or lower, from the initial area of injury, would have been fatal,” Helm said.

cho

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Re: Luke Evslin
« Reply #5 on: October 22, 2010, 01:08PM »


just a reminder to be careful
A ship in harbor is safe - but that is not what ships are for.