"There was a bang and a shudder. I got up on deck and couldn't see anything," said the self-confessed hunting, fishing diving man.
Immediately he returned below deck to find water coming through a hole. He started stuffing pillows into gap but soon realised he was "fighting a losing battle".
"The water was starting to come over the floor boards and I knew I had to get off."
He activated his emergency locator beacon and prepared to abandon ship. Letting down the sails stopped the yacht and he loaded the life-raft into a dinghy and gathered his "grab bags" stuffed full of emergency gear and food.
With those stashed on the dinghy he had some time to grab some personal items, before his boat named Maeva filled with water and sunk.
Mr White had a secondary emergency device he also activated. The inReach two-way, satellite communication device allowed him to send and receive messages to mobile numbers.
He text his wife of eight years telling her he was not in immediate danger, the weather was good and to let emergency services this wasn't a false activation.
Mr White inflated the life raft, attached it to his dingy and tied the kayak on to make himself as visible as possible to rescuers.
Once the signal was received by the Rescue Coordination Centre in Wellington they requested the help of the Northland Electricity rescue helicopter
Pilot Dean Voelkerling said the crew flew to Kaitaia, refuelling before heading towards the yachtie.
"We picked up his emergency locator beacon 15 minutes away from where he was. His marine 16 radio was water-logged so we couldn't quite hear what he was saying.
"A St John paramedic winched him off and we flew back to Whangarei."
Mr White had nothing but praise for his rescuers saying the were efficient and professional.
Rescue Coordination Centre spokesman John Ashby said Mr White did everything right.
"He did all the right things, had all the right equipment, and did everything he could to help save himself when his solo trip circumnavigating New Zealand turned to potential disaster."