Leicester Mercury

Coastal rescuers making waves...

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A lot of people don’t know the coastline, don’t know the waters. Suddenly they’re in the wrong place at the wrong time... RNLI volunteer Ryan, pictured right

THIS astonishin­g series featuring dramatic footage, follows RNLI crews across the country as they respond to callouts and embark on dangerous rescue missions.

It never ceases to amaze that this crucial emergency service is made up of a 5,000-strong army of volunteers.

These heroes have day jobs, but whenever their pagers sound, they head out to save everyone from paddleboar­ders and surfers, to sinking fishing boats and cargo ships stuck on rocks.

More than 90% of RNLI’s rescues come under the broad heading ‘leisure gone wrong’ – often a day at the beach can turn into a nightmare.

In Porthcawl, a surfer’s paradise turns out to be anything but when Storm Brendan wreaks havoc and leaves a group of young friends in grave danger.

Volunteers Bee, a chip shop owner, and Ryan, a property developer, responded to the callout. Bee says: “I remember it being cold, there was almost an eeriness to the weather.

“I remember the roar from the waves breaking against the shoreline.

“I remember thinking that’s a big swell.”

Ryan adds: “A lot of people don’t know the coastline, don’t know the waters. Suddenly they’re in the wrong place at the wrong time and the sea can be very cruel.”

Student Jack, the surfer in trouble, says: “I was paddling franticall­y and then realised the current was too strong. It was scary and I was panicking.”

In other accounts, a family out paddleboar­ding gets separated, with the children stranded on a sandbank, a man is injured jumping from rocks, and crews help an exhausted swimmer.

 ??  ?? Porthcawl RNLI lifeboat volunteers aboard RNLI Atlantic 85 lifeboat B832 during Storm Atiyah
Porthcawl RNLI lifeboat volunteers aboard RNLI Atlantic 85 lifeboat B832 during Storm Atiyah

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