Incredible Rescue by RAF
25 March 2013
Incredible Rescue by RAF SAR Helicopter Winchwoman
The crew of Rescue 169, the duty RAF search
and rescue helicopter from A Flight, 22 Squadron rescued a
seriously-injured crewman from a French trawler in atrocious weather in
the Irish Sea on Thursday 21st March 2013.
The crewman had serious head injuries and was
onboard a 25 metre French fishing vessel, “ALF”. A Royal Navy
Hydrographic vessel (HMS Echo) and a RNLI lifeboat, “ANGLE”, also
attended.
The Irish Sea weather 50 miles west of Milford
Haven was ferocious and the accompanying images show the scale of the
problem which faced the Sea King crew. The ‘ALF’ was pitching and
rolling violently, climbing and descending vertically 40 feet with each
swell and rolling violently. The 35 knot wind whipped up spray and the
sheeting rain, hampering visibility.
The ALF’s captain spoke very little English,
so a 3 way translation service was arranged via satellite phone
involving English and French Coastguards and the crew of Rescue 169.
They managed to brief the French captain about how the RAF helicopter
crew intended to get the crewman off the fishing boat.
The ‘ALF’s captain passed on a message
revealing the injured crewman’s condition had continued to deteriorate
and he had unstoppable head bleeding, so a rapid airlift was now
absolutely vital.
Winchwoman Sergeant Rachel Robinson made 6
separate, hazardous descents on the winch-wire in an attempt to reach
the ALF’s tiny, heaving deck. So violent were the seas that Rachel was
repeatedly snatched from ALF’s tiny deck as the boat plunged into wave
troughs far faster than the winch cable could be paid out.
Due to the horrendous sea state, Flight
Lieutenant ‘Taff’ Wilkins – the Sea King’s captain – suggested that a
boat-to-boat transfer should be tried to move the casualty to the nearby
RNLI lifeboat “ANGLE” from which a further airlift could be attempted
from ANGLE’s less cluttered deck. However, the Sea King was running out
of fuel, so a swift refuel was arranged at Haverford West to prepare for
a second attempt.
Returning once more, the crew of Rescue 169
found it had proven impossible to conduct the boat-to-boat transfer.
Things were becoming more difficult as neither of the Sea King’s pilots
could see the French vessel. Thanks to the presence of a fluent
French-speaker onboard HMS Echo, a revised plan was conveyed to the
French vessel’s captain. This involved getting RNLI lifeboat ANGLE into a
position 20 metres on the ALF’s starboard side, whilst HMS Echo moved
closer to shield ALF from the weather and sea state. The presence of the
RNLI boat gave pilot Taff Wilkins his only fixed visual reference from
which he worked out a stable hover above the ALF.
Winchwoman Sergeant Rachel Robinson was
lowered twice more, but again, the pitching seas ripped her from the
vessel. However, her third attempt was successful and Rachel managed to
detach from the winch-wire and assessed the casualty. Seeing his
perilous condition, Rachel elected to conduct an immediate, single-strop
recovery. Making use of the ALF’s slightly more predictable roll and
pitch rates, Taff Wilkins calculated the lift to the optimum second,
climbing his Sea King as the ALF reached the top of a swell and plucking
Rachel and the casualty clear of the deck.
The casualty was treated en-route for head injuries and
hypothermia and was taken to Swansea Moriston Hospital. Due to the
actions of the crew of rescue 169 and Winchwoman Rachel Robinson’s
incredible fortitude, the injured crewman survived.
Photographs:The crew of Rescue 169, the duty RAF search and rescue helicopter from A Flight, 22 Squadron rescued a seriously-injured crewman from a French trawler in atrocious weather in the Irish Sea.
RAF/MOD Crown Copyright 2013
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