A massive wave thundered down on the upturned hull and the deck rotated even more.
The crew said they had survived on the upturned hull, sleeping huddled together in a compartment the size of a double bed.
The rescue team cuts through and the group climb out of the upturned hull.
The next, the upturned yellow hull of his kayak was all any of us could see.
Some of the lifeboat crew managed to climb onto the upturned hull.
He spent five hours clinging to the upturned hull, before a wave righted the boat.
In clear water conditions, the upturned hull can be seen reaching to within 5 m of the surface.
The crew swam out from under the canoe and attached themselves to the upturned hull.
They scrambled onto the upturned hull and drifted for more than 20 minutes before coming to rest on a bank two miles away.
Five or six men and one woman climbed onto the upturned hull.