Photo: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty

Man dies after 40-foot jump off Huntington Beach Pier

Landon Holman didn’t know he would becalled on to save a lifewhen he visited California’s Huntington Beach pier to ride waves as the sun set on Sunday.

“I really just wanted to go out to get a paddle in, to get a workout,” he tells PEOPLE. “And there were maybe about five or six other surfers out, not very many. And quite a few spectators on the pier.”

The 27-year-old says that while he was on his surfboard, he noticed a woman standing on the edge of the pier’s railing, seemingly preparing to jump 40 feet into the water below her. Holman tried to talk the woman out of leaping, but visitors and other surfers in the water egged her on.

“I knew she had no business being in the water, I thought she was kidding,” he recalls. “Unfortunately, there were a lot of instigators outweighing my voice.”

Moments later, she fell into the water.

“I knew it wasn’t going to be good — I knew she wasn’t going to be able to get herself into shore,” Holman says.

The woman immediately had difficulty staying above water. Then, as Holman paddled over to her, a man she was with — later identified as 44-year-oldFenton Auston Dee III— also jumped from the pier.

But only one of the two, who Holman says were siblings, would survive the ordeal.

“When they both jumped in, they started screaming frantically, like, ‘Help, help,’ just begging and pleading for help,” says Holman.

courtesy Landon Holman

Surfer Who Tried to Save Man Who Died After Jumping from Huntington Beach Pier Speaks Out Courtesy: Landon Holman

The surfers then battled the strong current as they tried to bring the siblings to shore, with Holman doing his best to instruct the woman on how to hold her breath when the waves crashed into them.

Holman and the woman eventually reached land, but when he turned back to the ocean, he saw Dee alone, he recalls.

“I immediately got back on my board and paddled back out as quickly as I could to him,” Holman says. “And me and Ryan got to him at the same time and when we got to him, he was unresponsive. We just — we literally just did the best we could to get him into shore as quickly as possible, just used every ounce of energy we had.”

The 36-year-old woman, who told Holman her name was Heather, survived.

Days after the incident, Holman says he doesn’t think of himself as a hero for stepping in to help, but he does want to encourage others to take ocean safety more seriously.

“When you’re on top of the pier looking down, it can look deceiving,” he explains. “It doesn’t look as gnarly, as crazy when they’re looking up above. You don’t know how cold the water is. You don’t know how strong the rips are. It looks beautiful, man. The ocean is the most beautiful and the most dangerous place at the same time.”

“I really just want to bring awareness to how magical and how dangerous the ocean can be. It’s not something to be taken lightly,” Holman adds. “I just really want people to think twice before they get themselves involved in that kind of situation.”

source: people.com