Keswick Mountain Rescue Team’s part in saving the life of a fell walker who suffered a heart attack while attempting to complete the Wainwrights has been recognised by a member of the Great North Air Ambulance Service.
Ian Wood, 48, of Cockermouth, had headed to Langstrath Valley on November 27 to continue his second round of walking the Wainwrights, which are 214 fells in the Lake District.
He said: “I’d gone up the front of Eagle Crag, which was quite a steep rocky climb and got to the summit and then I was going between Eagle Crag and Sergeant’s Crag when the heart attack happened.
“At the time I thought it was just indigestion, so I stopped and took some Rennies but that didn’t really help. I got to the top of Sergeant’s Crag and I took some paracetamol, which again, made no difference. At that point, I kind of knew I needed help.”
Mr Wood had provided his wife Linda with the route he was taking and his timings, so he didn’t want to deviate too far from the path in case people had to come looking for him.
Unfortunately, he hadn’t seen anybody during his walk, and there was no phone signal, so he planned to try and get to the valley floor as quickly as possible.
He said: “I’d gone past all the crags, and then found a spot where I could start heading down. I couldn’t really walk anymore, so it was more crawling and sliding and rolling down the hillside until I could see the path.
“Luckily, I saw a couple walking along the bottom in the distance and I had a whistle and torch with me, so I managed to blow the whistle and flash the light at them, which got their attention.”
The couple climbed up to Mr Wood to offer their help, before one of them ran down to Stonethwaite to call 999.
Keswick Mountain Rescue Team, GNAAS and the Coastguard were tasked to the incident and arrived shortly afterwards.
Mr Wood said: “I remember seeing the team from GNAAS scrambling up to me because they had landed on the other side of the river.
“They did an ECG and confirmed it was a heart attack and then they were planning the quickest way to get me to hospital.
“Paramedic Lee and Izzy the doctor were very professional, calm, and reassuring and they put me at ease. They gave me aspirin and GTN spray straight away, but nothing really altered the pain. I think I was too far gone by then, but I felt I was going to be all right, because help was there.
“While the mountain rescue team were discussing how long it would take to get me to the helicopter, the coastguard appeared up above me.
“They put me in a sling and winched me up, then 25 minutes later I was in Blackpool.”
Mr Wood had a blockage in his left anterior descending artery so he had a stent fitted, and was put on a drip for 48 hours to break up a blood clot.
He remained in hospital for five days and is now undergoing rehabilitation to help with his recovery.
Since the incident Mr Wood’s wife has raised more than £1,000 for GNAAS from a walking challenge and has also signed up to do the Great North Run.
The couple recently visited GNAAS’s base in Langwathby with their children to thank paramedic Lee Salmon for his help.
Mr Salmon, who is head of operations west at the charity, said: “It is a real pleasure to meet Ian again, I feared how his heart attack might affect him and it was good to hear that his heart surgery came promptly and as a result of a collaboration between several organisations.
“Keswick Mountain Rescue Team, having the forethought to launch the coastguard, their professionalism and swift rescue of a medically unwell casualty and then the transfer of the patient to the PPCI centre at Blackpool for the surgery that will now help Ian lead a relatively normal life after he recovers.”