The Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, Continue reading
Tag Archives: helicopter
Reid says Government should simply overturn Chinook verdict
Alan Reid, Argyll’s MP, has been having a busy week but has come up with Continue reading
Angus Robertson & Jim Mather’s response to MoD Chinook revelations
SNP Westminster Leader and Defence Spokesperson, Continue reading
Oban & Islay Lifeboats in major rescue in Corryvreckan
Two RNLI lifeboats – from Oban and from Islay – and an SAR Continue reading
Oban Lifeboat replaces NHS helicopter in bad weather Medevac
The NHS ‘Helimed’ helicopter was slated to carry out a medical evacuation Continue reading
Search for experienced Scuba Diver off Ardnamurchan
Update 16.00 3rd October: At 15.00 today, weather forced the abandonment Continue reading
39 year-old climbing guide survives 700ft fall in Glencoe
Yesterday afternoon, Max Hunter, a 39 year-old climbing guide leading three clients at the time, fell 700ft with a collapsing cornice in the Stob Coire nan Lochan area.
Mr Hunter, who works for a climbing company, moved to Fort William from Swansea for the climbing opportunities offered by Scotland’s mountains.
Glencoe Mountain Rescue Team and an RAF helicopter were on the scene and got the guide airlifted to Belford Hospital in Fort William – where he has had time to come to terms with his good luck.
All18 survive as helicopter ditches on approach to platform on Etap Field off Scottish North Sea coast
The RAF received its first report of a helicopter with 18 on board ditching in the North Sea at 6:43 p.m. It was a Super Puma ditching about 120 miles east of Aberdeen as it approached an offshore platform in the ETAP field.
The RAF’s aeronautical rescue coordination center at RAF Kinloss was providing helicopter assistance to the Aberdeen Coast Guard. One RAF helicopter and one civilian helicopter went to the scene and two more civilian helicopters joined them there, with another RAF helicopter in support.
9.30pm UPDATE: It is not known whether or not the pilot had time to make a mayday call but it is now known that all 18 on board have been picked up. James Lyon, assistant controller at RAF Kinloss, says: ‘We have been picking up beacons from their lifejackets… Two aircraft are on the scene’. Three have been taken to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary and and the others are being brought back to the city by a fast rescue boat.
Thursday 19th February UPDATE: Visibility is said to heva been down to half a mile and the helicopter was in view of the platform when it hit the water. The ditched helicopter, said to be missing its tail boom, is reported to have sat upright in the water because of its flotation bags. This made escape a lot easier.
The rescue was more difficult because it took place in darkness and with a cloud base lower then the platform’s deck. There were so many rescue units in the area that a mid-air helicopter collision was a real risk. An RAF Nimrod coordinated movements and acted successfully to defend against this possibility. The Air Accidents Investigation Branch is launching an investigation into the accident and is sending nine people to Aberdeen today.
The First Minister, Alex Salmond has thanked the rescue services for their successful efforts to avert ‘that could have been a terrible tragedy’.
Surfer rescued a mile off Kintyre’s Machrihanish beach in Force 11 winds
A man in his early twenties, surfing off Machrihanish beach on the Mull of Kintyre with a friend was reported missing at 15.40 after they got separated. An hour and twenty minutes later at 17.00 he was found a mile off the beach by a rescue helicopter from Prestwick which picked him up. The winds had whipped up to Force 11 – one point below hurricane level.
The surfer was taken to hospital as a precaution but was uninjured.
The helicopter has had to stay at Machrihanish airport because of the curent wind strengths – a fact underlining the risks the crew took to rescue the surfer in these conditions.
Isle of Luing reassured on medical emergency access
Islanders on Luing, campaigning for a bridge, have long been concerned that there is no access for medical emergencies after the last ferry stops at 6.15pm, Mondays to Fridays. There is no ferry access at all on Sundays. The Ambulance Service has now reassured islanders that every case is considered on its merits and that if a helicopter lift is indicated where there would appear to be a life-threatening condition, they will call it out. It notes that helicopters cost them £3,000 per hour and that in the last year they have deployed thirty such emergency transfers.












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