Firefighters rescue Coventry woman stuck up to her waist in mud
Firefighters had to rescue a woman in Coventry who got stuck up to her waist in mud today.
The woman was walking her dog in a field off Pound Close in Berkswell and had to be checked over by paramedics.
Fire officers from Canley were called out this afternoon at around 2pm and had to struggle against the mud themselves as they freed her from the farmer’s field.
Crew commander Dave Howells said: “In some places the field was firm and other places it was a bog.
“The lady started to sink and the more she wriggled, the more she went down and the suction of the mud kept her there.
“She was shouting for help and someone in a nearby garden heard her and called 999.
“We went as far in to the field as we could and then used shovels, sheets and ladders to create a base. We then sat her down on a ladder behind her and dug her out.”
The lady’s son, who arrived just after she had been rescued, said: “She often walks through the field which has a right of way and got stuck, but she is okay now she has had some hot food.
“The firefighters were great and even had to rescue one of their own who got stuck.”
Meanwhile strong winds and rain were expected to return to Coventry and Warwickshire on Friday.
Rain is likely to be heaviest tomorrow morning, with gales of about 40mph predicted by the evening.
A spokesman for Bablake Weather Station in Coventry said: “Rain will be spreading in soon after dawn on Friday, with a wet day in prospect with rain heaviest in the morning; winds will be strengthening too with gales by evening.
"It will become windy again on Friday night into Saturday morning with yet more local gales and again Sunday night into Monday.”
There is a glimmer of hope with sunshine predicted during the day on Sunday.
Next week is looking unsettled, with further rain being predicted by Bablake Weather Station.
But a spokesman said: “Looking ahead to the end of the month, it may just become less wet, with temperatures dropping back a touch, just as we approach spring.”
Coventy and Warwickshire - like the rest of the country - have been battered by winds and torrential rain this week.
Bablake Weather Station recorded its highest February wind speeds since 1988, as gales hit the 57mph mark on Wednesday.
Trees were brought down across the region, and there was flooding in Newton and Hampton-in-Arden.
Families leaving the region for half term are being asked to take extreme care when driving through worst hit areas.
Darron Burness, head of the AA’s flood rescue team, said: “Allow extra time for tomorrow’s commute as road conditions are going to be pretty horrible at times with more wind and heavy rain, and risk of snow and ice further north."
