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'Alive or dead?': Wife's agonising wait after husband vanishes while kayaking

Author
Annabel Reid,
Publish Date
Fri, 22 Aug 2025, 7:07am
Mike Beavon was rescued from the Tongariro River after missing for five hours and failing to arrive at his destination point. This photo shows him heading off on the paddle. Inset: Mike Beavon.
Mike Beavon was rescued from the Tongariro River after missing for five hours and failing to arrive at his destination point. This photo shows him heading off on the paddle. Inset: Mike Beavon.

'Alive or dead?': Wife's agonising wait after husband vanishes while kayaking

Author
Annabel Reid,
Publish Date
Fri, 22 Aug 2025, 7:07am

鈥淎live or dead?鈥 

That was the terrifying question Michela Beavon faced when search teams said they had found her missing husband along the Tongariro River. 

For five hours, she had waited for word from searchers after he failed to return from a kayaking trip. 

She felt 鈥渁bsolutely helpless鈥. 

At the same time, Mike Beavon was shivering on a riverbank. 

But he was alive. 

The Beavons, from Taup艒, have spoken out about their ordeal after Mike was reported overdue on Saturday, August 9, during what was supposed to be a simple afternoon paddle. 

Mike knew the outdoors well. Four decades of kayaking and extensive bush experience had made him a seasoned adventurer. 

It had been a long time since he had tackled the Tongariro River. So when his grandson had a soccer game in T奴rangi, Mike saw it as a great opportunity. 

The paddle that didn鈥檛 go to plan 

He set off from access 10 on Kaimanawa Rd, expecting a three-hour trip down the grade 3 white-water river to Blue Pool, then on to Red Hut Pool, where his family was to meet him. 

As he reached the Rangipo Prison Road Bridge more than two hours in, a 鈥渟illy little thing鈥 on a minor rapid set off a cascade of events. 

Mike missed the river split and lost his line through a rapid. He tried to manoeuvre across jets of water and slippery rocks but became stuck on a rock. 

He got out and grabbed his paddle, but his kayak slipped away. 

With the riverbanks thick with scrub, Mike realised it was too dangerous to swim or walk back up towards the Rangipo Prison Road Bridge. 

鈥淚f I go around there and get stuck, I might never be found... until some pig dog sniffs me out,鈥 he said afterwards. 

Mike鈥檚 phone, drifting away with his kayak, was of no use. 

He moved to a small beach along the riverbank where he hoped to be visible to passing rafts or rescuers. 

Mike Beavon was rescued from the Tongariro River after missing for five hours and failing to arrive at his destination point. This photo shows him heading off on the paddle. Mike Beavon was rescued from the Tongariro River after missing for five hours and failing to arrive at his destination point. This photo shows him heading off on the paddle. 

Mike said he was reasonably well dressed and had spare clothes, but as temperatures dropped, he became chilly. Taupo hit a low of 2.7C that night. 

He built a small shelter to block the wind and clung to hope. 

鈥淲hen darkness descended, I thought, 鈥極h hell, this is going to be a long night鈥欌. 

Mike pictured his family鈥檚 grief and the responsibilities he left behind. 

鈥淎ll these things go through your head ... All the things people depend on you for would have to be done by someone else.鈥 

In the dark: The agony of waiting five hours for a missing husband 

Michela dropped off her husband at 10.30am, expecting to meet him at Red Hut Pool about three hours later. 

By 2.30pm, there was no sign of him. 

She called Mike, who didn鈥檛 answer. She kept waiting. 

By 4pm, dread set in. Their daughter Amelia, waiting with her, phoned the police. Michela said the response was: 鈥淗e鈥檚 not quite missing yet, but we鈥檒l keep you on the books.鈥 

At 5pm, still nothing. 

Michela then called the police, and officers met her at Red Hut Pool and alerted Land Search and Rescue. 

Michela showed Land Search and Rescue a photo she had taken of Mike setting off. She said it was a 鈥淕odsend鈥 giving rescuers a picture of Mike鈥檚 kayak, clothing and helmet. 

Mike Beavon is used to outdoor adventures. Mike Beavon is used to outdoor adventures. 

Land Search and Rescue told Michela it was too late to launch rafts or kayaks. The Greenlea Rescue Helicopter was called in. 

The helicopter crew saw Mike鈥檚 kayak and informed Michela. That meant 鈥渢here鈥檚 a human body somewhere鈥, she said. 

About 7.30pm, she watched the chopper sweep overhead while still waiting at Red Hut Pool. 

Michela called the experience a 鈥渄isaster, emotionally鈥. 

About 8pm, Greenlea Rescue Helicopter crews found Mike. Their search had begun upriver from Motuoapa and had covered most of the Tongariro River. 

Rescuers spotted Mike鈥檚 kayak about 1km past him, then traced the river to where he was stranded. 

The area was too remote for a helicopter to land, so a rescuer was winched down, and Mike was lifted to safety. 

Though he was not allowed to take his paddle, Mike said the warmth inside the helicopter was immediate - a stark contrast to the cold riverbank. 

The helicopter flew him to the T奴rangi aerodrome. 

Michela was sitting in their ute at 9pm when the call came: 鈥淲e found your husband鈥. 

鈥淎live or dead?鈥 she asked. 

He was alive. 

Relief flooded in. But the hours spent stressing were 鈥渘ot pleasant鈥. 

Tongariro River Rafting retrieved Mike鈥檚 paddle and kayak a couple of days later. 

A beacon for the Beavons 

The Beavons said the experience 鈥渞eally has opened our eyes鈥 and the family were now planning on getting a personal location or distress beacon. 

Department of Conservation land safety forum programme lead Tania Seward said the device lets emergency services know when someone needs help by transmitting their location via satellite. 

Seward said data, as of June 30, 2023, showed that 90% of rescues were completed in less than six hours when beacons were activated. Without a beacon, rescues were completed in less than 17 hours. 

 Senior Constable Barry Shepherd. Photo / suppliedSenior Constable Barry Shepherd. Photo / supplied 

Taup艒 police area search and rescue squad lead Barry Shepherd was part of Mike鈥檚 rescue team. 

He said beacons were a tool to potentially make rescues 鈥渆asier鈥 and 鈥渞educe risk鈥, but making good decisions by being prepared and staying informed before heading out was at the core of keeping safe. 

Annabel Reid is a multimedia journalist for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post, based in Rotorua. Originally from Hawke鈥檚 Bay, she has a Bachelor of Communications from the University of Canterbury. 

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