The Daily Telegraph

Angler who thought, ‘I’m going to need a bigger throat...’

Attempt to kiss dover sole results in a blocked airway, frantic 999 call and a lucky escape for fisherman

- By Victoria Ward

AN ANGLER who nearly died when a dover sole jumped down his throat has told how he was trying to kiss it when it flew out of his hand “like a bar of soap”.

Sam Quilliam, 28, had just caught the 14cm fish when it took exception to his amorous advances and leapt down his windpipe, choking him.

He collapsed and went into cardiac arrest as his terrified friends dialled 999 before performing CPR until paramedics arrived.

Mr Quilliam, from the New Forest in Hampshire, returned to the scene of the bizarre incident at Boscombe Pier, in Bournemout­h, Dorset, yesterday and described how he had decided to give the fish a quick kiss before throwing it back as it was too small to keep.

He said he had been inspired by Rex Hunt, an Australian TV fisherman who often planted a kiss on his catches.

“I picked it up and went to give it a kiss before I threw it back,” he said.

“I squeezed it and like a bar of soap it jumped out of my hand and into my mouth. It got out of my hands and into my mouth and basically swam straight down my throat.

“I ran round the pier like a headless chicken and then passed out. It was terrifying from what I remember.”

Mr Quilliam stopped breathing for three minutes. When paramedics arrived, they used a laryngosco­pe to extend his mouth and throat then grabbed the fish’s tail with forceps.

It took six attempts to pull the fish free as its barb and gills had become stuck in the angler’s throat.

Mr Quilliam admitted he was “a bit shaken up by it all”, adding: “You just don’t expect it to happen. People do things like this all the time and you just don’t expect it to happen to you.”

Mr Quilliam was yesterday reunited with paramedic Matt Harrison, who helped save him, and thanked him for his efforts. “Thank you – you are a credit to the NHS,” he said.

He also thanked his friends, Steve Perry and Matt Holmes, who dialled 999 and performed CPR.

“Steve and Matt and the paramedics did a great job to save my life,” he said. “I could have easily died and I feel very lucky to be here. I feel much better now – it’s like beyond winning the lottery. Me and my family are really grateful.” The fish did not survive the incident. Mr Perry, 27, who has known Mr Quilliam since school, said they had been fishing together for seven years. He said: “It was just sheer panic; it was horrendous. He was rigid, struggling to get breath; blood was coming from his mouth. It was very serious – nothing comical about it.

“We went from a great night catching fish with some friends to him on the floor. We reacted on our instincts. Matt was pumping his chest and I was doing the breaths. He was dead – his heart had stopped. I was so relieved when he came round.”

Mr Quilliam insisted that the ordeal would not put him off fishing and said he had not ruled out kissing a fish again, adding: “Probably just a bit bigger ... and not a sole.”

‘It jumped out of my hand and into my mouth... and basically swam straight down my throat...’

 ??  ?? Fisherman Sam Quilliam with his girlfriend Sandra Souto on Boscombe Pier in Bournemout­h, flanked by the paramedic team which saved him, including Matt Harrison, far right
Fisherman Sam Quilliam with his girlfriend Sandra Souto on Boscombe Pier in Bournemout­h, flanked by the paramedic team which saved him, including Matt Harrison, far right
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