Man rescued from ice 500 metres offshore in Puck Bay
A dramatic maritime rescue operation was carried out on the frozen waters of Puck Bay after a man was spotted immobilised on unstable sea ice approximately 500 metres from the shoreline. The operation was conducted by the Polish Maritime Search and Rescue Service (MSPiR SAR) in close cooperation with the State Fire Service, Police and emergency medical teams.
security police pomerania maritime rescue fire brigade news12 january 2026 | 23:34 | Source: Gazeta Morska | Prepared by: Kamil Kusier | Print

fot. Michał Konkel / BSR Władysławowo
Emergency call from regional dispatch centre
At 12:07 the Provincial Emergency Call Centre (WCPR) notified MSPiR SAR of a person visible on the ice near the town of Puck. The caller reported that the man was crouching, unable to stand and showing no signs of movement. His trousers were partially lowered, indicating possible medical distress.
The situation was confirmed by observers from the Kaczy Winkiel lookout point, approximately one kilometre from the location, who also reported no visible movement from the casualty.
High-risk operation on unstable sea ice
A shore-based rescue team from MSPiR SAR’s Władysławowo station was immediately dispatched together with fire brigades from Puck. Police units and a medical rescue team were also mobilised.
Rescuers reached the casualty across the fragile ice sheet and evacuated him to the shore. Upon assessment, the man was found to be in cardiac arrest. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was immediately initiated and continued until the patient was handed over to the emergency medical team. Police secured the area during the operation.
SAR director: “every minute was critical”
Sebastian Kluska, director of the Polish Maritime Search and Rescue Service, said the operation involved extreme risk:
- The casualty was located far from shore on an area of ice with highly variable load-bearing capacity. This was a rescue carried out under conditions of serious risk, both for the victim and for our crews. Every minute was critical.
He stressed that frozen marine waters remain highly deceptive:
- Puck Bay is not a safe ice surface. Sea currents, salinity and wind mean the ice can be dangerously thin even when it looks solid. Walking on sea ice is a life-threatening mistake.
Ninth SAR operation of 2026
The rescue in Puck Bay was the ninth operation conducted by MSPiR SAR in 2026. Maritime rescue authorities continue to warn residents and visitors not to enter frozen sea areas and to report any emergencies immediately via the national emergency number 112.
- Each of these incidents puts multiple lives at risk. The safest decision is simply to stay off the ice, Sebastian Kluska added.
Buy us a coffee, and we’ll invest in great maritime journalism! Support Gazeta Morska and help us sail forward – click here!
Kamil Kusier
redaktor naczelny
comments
Add the first comment
see also
Canada's Arctic patrol ship HMCS William Hall visits London
Bryza and CTV Aquata rehearse rescue manoeuvre in the bay
XIII Medical Rescue Exercises in Poland highlight maritime emergency response and SAR cooperation
Drones instead of divers. Belgian mine hunter Oostende advances toward full operational capability
A new cybersecurity law. Industrial automation under scrutiny. Accountability now rests with the board
NATO minehunter responds to real mayday during BALTOPS 2026 exercise
Polish Navy on the rise: admirals move into the top tier of national command
80 passengers, rough seas and seconds that decide between life and death: Ustka rehearses a passenger-ship disaster
Ships of Hope on the rivers of the Amazon. Brazil's Navy reaches where the land cannot
NATO signals Baltic Sea dominance as ORP Lublin leads allied formation during BALTOPS 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT