Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Taming a cruel sea

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The volunteers of Hornsea Inshore Rescue have been saving lives for more than 25 years. Chris Bond finds out more about this dedicated team of unsung heroes. Pictures by James Hardisty.

Apig shed is an unlikely home for a lifeboat, but for the fledgling Hornsea Inshore Rescue it was a godsend. It was donated to the charity by a local businessma­n in the seaside town who was keen to help them get started. “He told us he had an old pig pen that we could use and we were very grateful because it meant we could get up and running,” says Sue

Hickson-Marsay, who is chair of Hornsea Inshore Rescue and one of the founding members of the independen­t lifeboat charity when it was set up in 1994.

“We used to have a coastguard boat and I was part of that team and we saved many lives, but then the government decided that they didn’t think there was a need to have a boat at Hornsea, which left us with no cover,” says Sue.

It meant that if there was an incident in the waters at Hornsea the nearest RNLI lifeboat would have to come from Bridlingto­n or Withernsea, and given the fact that Hornsea attracts thousands of

the town and wanted to help out. “We said that even if we saved just one life it would have paid for itself,” says Sue.

Over the past quarter of a century the Hornsea Inshore Rescue team, which is made up entirely of volunteers, has helped save many more than that.

During this time the charity has grown and through thrift, hard work and more than a little imaginatio­n has become invaluable to the town.

The local council provided some land on the seafront at a peppercorn rent and the volunteers raised more money enabling them to move from the former pig shed to a new purpose-built boat house, which has been their base for the past decade.

It costs around £40,000 a year to run the lifeboat station, all of which has to be raised by the charity. So as well as saving lives, it has a team of highly-trained volunteers who give educationa­l talks and presentati­ons to schools and local businesses, and also run RYA (Royal Yachting Associatio­n) approved courses on how to stay safe at sea. All of which helps bring in much needed funds.

The station is on call 24/7 and can be called out by the coastguard to an incident at any time. At the

They work in all kinds of conditions putting their own lives on the line each time they head out to sea. “Had we not existed then people would definitely have lost their lives in the sea off Hornsea,” she says.

“We get called out to all kinds of incidents. It might be a broken down fishing boat, people who’ve been cut off by the tide near the cliffs, or kayakers and swimmers who have got into difficulty.” There isn’t, as you might expect, such a thing as a normal day. “We might get seven callouts one week and none the next. We just have to make sure we’re ready when the call comes in.”

Unlike the RNLI, independen­t lifeboat stations like Hornsea Inshore Rescue don’t receive government funding and are entirely reliant on their own fundraisin­g efforts.

That said, they have a good relationsh­ip with local RNLI teams and often work alongside them. “We base our standards on theirs and we work with them and train with them when we can,” says Sue.

She hopes by raising awareness they might attract more support. “If more people know about us then they might help with fundraisin­g or even join us.”

As well as being one of the charity’s founders, Sue is also the operations manager and always on the lookout for new recruits.

“What’s been great is we’ve had a lot of young people joining us, and we’ve found that having us on their CV has helped with their careers. One went on to join the RAF as a fighter pilot, and we’ve had others join the fire brigade and the police force.”

Faye Melody, 21, is one of the volunteers. She grew up in and around Hornsea and became a volunteer in 2018. “My dad was a coxswain on the free-fall lifeboats on an oil rig so I thought this would be a good thing to do.”

Like her fellow crew members she’s faced some challengin­g situations. “My first call out was to an incident involving a fisherman who had gone overboard and I’ve been out to a wind farm about ten miles out where a diver had the bends. The swells were quite bad so that was pretty tricky.”

Faye, who works in retail and hopes to join the fire service, feels she’s learned a huge amount since she joined. “You feel part of a real team and when a rescue goes well you feel like you’ve made a difference. It’s also given me important life skills. I can do CPR, my communicat­ion skills are better and it’s shown I can work under pressure.”

The tireless work of Faye and all the other volunteers hasn’t gone unnoticed. “The people here have been immensely supportive,” says

Sue. “Not just the people of Hornsea but the surroundin­g towns and villages. We get coach loads of school children on educationa­l visits and they learn an awful lot about the work we do.”

For more informatio­n go to www. hornseares­cue.co.uk

Donations can be made by going to www. justgiving.com/hornseains­horerescue and also via www.facebook.com/ hornseares­cue

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 ??  ?? THE RESCUERS: Above director/coxswain Paul Jebson, with chair/coxswain Sue Hickson-Marsay; below (left to right) coxswain Jo Brown, chair/coxswain Sue Hickson-Marsay, director/coxswain Paul Jebson, crew Faye Melody, crew Rob Carthew, director/leading coxswain Karl Shannon, crew Adam Collins, crew Craig Beadle, launch driver James Kennedy.
THE RESCUERS: Above director/coxswain Paul Jebson, with chair/coxswain Sue Hickson-Marsay; below (left to right) coxswain Jo Brown, chair/coxswain Sue Hickson-Marsay, director/coxswain Paul Jebson, crew Faye Melody, crew Rob Carthew, director/leading coxswain Karl Shannon, crew Adam Collins, crew Craig Beadle, launch driver James Kennedy.

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