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Salvadoran sea survivor lands in Mexico to meet dead companion’s family

Jose Salvador Alvarenga, a fisherman who says he drifted at sea for more than a year surviving on raw fish, turtles and bird blood, is embraced by his parents, Ricardo Orellana, right, and Maria Julia Alvarenga during a news conference in San Salvador, El Salvador, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014. (AP Photo/Salvador Melendez).
Jose Salvador Alvarenga, a fisherman who says he drifted at sea for more than a year surviving on raw fish, turtles and bird blood, is embraced by his parents, Ricardo Orellana, right, and Maria Julia Alvarenga during a news conference in San Salvador, El Salvador, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2014. (AP Photo/Salvador Melendez).

MEXICO CITY – A Salvadoran fisherman who says he spent 13 months adrift in the Pacific Ocean has arrived in Mexico ready to meet with the family of a young companion who died early in the voyage.

Jose Salvador Alvarenga said he promised his friend Ezequiel Cordoba that he would give a message before he died about a month into the ordeal.

READ MORE: Salvador castaway is mentally fragile, doctors say

Alvarenga’s boat washed up in the Marshall Islands in February and now he is back in the country where the journey began in December 2012. Alvarenga landed in Mexico City’s airport Friday and spoke during a layover before catching another flight to Chiapas state to meet Cordoba’s family.

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The 37-year-old man landed in Mexico City’s airport Friday with his parents and lawyer before catching another flight to Chiapas state to meet Cordoba’s family.

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“I feel like a hero,” said Alvarenga after arriving in the Chiapas town of Tapachula, from where he will drive to the fishing village of Costa Azul, the place where it all began.

Alvarenga said his boat engine stopped working on Dec. 12, 2012, when a storm hit and sent them further and further into the ocean, making it impossible to return to land.

“There was nothing else we could do, except cry and suffer,” Alvarenga said.

There was a lot of suffering from hunger, and he said he often cried and prayed to God for a miracle. Other than that, Alvarenga offered little details of the incredible voyage, saying he wants to save them for a book.

“I don’t feel capable yet of telling what I remember,” he said. “When I talk about that day, I feel like I am back there in the moment when I was suffering and hurting… what I am trying to do is to forget that.”

The sea survivor limped, but unlike his first public appearances where he spoke pausing a lot, he was articulate this time.

Alvarenga’s attorney, Benedicto Perlea, said that they are in talks with publishers and producers for a book and a movie about his survival.

Alvarenga said he has decided that he no longer wants to be a fisherman and prefers to find a safer job in his native El Salvador.

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