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February 4, 2026

13-year-old boy speaks out after swimming miles to save family stranded at sea

WATCH: Teen swims for miles to save family

A 13-year-old Australian boy is speaking out after swimming alone for four hours without a life jacket in order to get help for his mom and siblings, who were stranded at sea.

"I just said, 'Not today, not today, not today. I have to keep on going,'" Austin Appelbee told Australia's ABC News.

Austin and his family, including his mom Joanne Appelbee and his two younger siblings, said they were on a beach trip on Jan. 30 and had taken a kayak and two inflatable stand-up paddleboards out into the ocean. They said they had planned to stay out in the water for about an hour.

Initially, the family said the ocean was calm but then the weather suddenly changed and their kayak flipped over and started to take on water.

Appelbee said at first, she tried to tow the two paddleboards and her two younger children but after the kayak began filling with water, she decided to send Austin ahead and paddle to shore to get help.

"In the beginning, it was, 'We're going to be fine and Austin is going to make it back,'" Appelbee said. "As time went on, I was like, 'Why haven't I seen anyone come?'"

Austin, who first learned to swim at the age of 4, said he focused on happy thoughts like thinking about his family and friends and his favorite Thomas the Tank Engine character.

"I was just thinking in my head, like, thinking I was going to make it through. But I was also thinking about all my friends at school," Austin recalled.

Austin said he initially started traveling to shore with the kayak but while fighting waves, he decided to abandon it and swim by himself.

"And then finally, I just made it to shore. I just collapsed," he said.

After arriving on shore, Austin said he then had to run for another mile down the beach to get his family's phone and call emergency services.

"He's absolutely amazing," Appelbee said of her 13-year-old son. "Me and his dad are super proud."

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority responded to the incident and later provided camera footage of a rescue boat coming to the aid of the Appelbee family.