Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 

Dramatic rescue at Fahan Creek 01.10.08

by Liam Porter, Inishowen Independent

CALLS have been made to have signs erected warning of the dangers of walking on mud flats at Fahan after a person got stuck in the mud flats there for the second time in the past few weeks.
The calls came after a man had to be winched free from the mud by a helicopter on Saturday afternoon after he had got stuck in the mud.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent yesterday George O’Hagan, a Lough Swilly Lifeboat crew member who was in Fahan at the time, said the man had a lucky escape.
“He had walked out, maybe 100 yards from the beach when he got stuck in the mud. I was working at a boat in Fahan when a man delivering oil told me there was somebody stuck. I went across and realised that it would be dangerous to try to go out so I called the coastguard and suggested that perhaps a helicopter should be sent.”
Mr. O’Hagan said a number of men had already gathered to try to help the man and as well as the helicopter, the Gardai, fire crew and ambulance were on the scene very quickly.
“It probably took around forty minutes for the helicopter to get to the scene and at that stage the man was safely winched out of the mud and brought to the shore where he was then taken by ambulance to hospital in Letterkenny.”
Rescued from the mud flats at Fahan Creek.
The local RNLI man said all those who were on the scene on the day were there to provide assistance to the unfortunate man who had been stuck, but added that the man was lucky that there were people around.
“I suppose one of the big messages to go out from something like this is that if a person gets in difficulty they should use the 999 number and call the emergency services. The quicker the emergency services can respond the more likely it will be that there is a successful outcome to any rescue,” he said.
Mr. O’Hagan also agreed that signage in the area might help prevent further incidents in the area.
“It’s never really been a problem before but when there are two such incidents in the space of a number of weeks then perhaps it is time for somebody to consider a few signs to warn people of the danger of walking on the mud.”
At the end of August a fourteen year-old local boy, Stephen Doherty, raised the alarm to prompt a rescue when a man got into difficulties in mud flats at Fahan Creek.
Return to > News