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   Web Issue 3149 May 17 2008   
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Highlands walker rescued after 4000 mile rescue alert

An elderly long-distance walker who collapsed in pain in the Highlands was rescued today after a distress beacon was picked-up 4,000 miles away in the States.

The RAF, who co-ordinated the Danish man's rescue, said it was the first activation of a new type of distress transmitter, in the UK.

The tourist, who was suffering from acute stomach pains, activated the beacon around 3am this morning.

He was on a long-distance coast-to-coast solo trek when he became ill in Glen Etive, 15 miles south of Fort William.

When he pressed the emergency button on a handset the size of a TV remote control, a Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) text message arrived 4,000 miles away in Houston, Texas, at the GEOS Emergency Response Centre.

They contacted police in Fort William, who alerted RAF Kinloss, who in turn sent a Royal Navy Sea King from Prestwick, Ayrshire to rescue the Danish tourist.

The man, thought to be in his 60s, was taken to hospital at Fort William where he received treatment.

Rescue co-ordinator, Flight Sergeant Tim Dickinson, said, "This was a perfect example of excellent cooperation between the police at Fort William and the military search and rescue services.

"We have rescued a Danish tourist in the Scottish mountains following an emergency call from the USA, using a Royal Navy helicopter and co-ordinated by the Royal Air Force."

He said he would encourage the use of such systems by walkers and yachtsmen.


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Posted by: Anne, mogadishu on 12:23pm Mon 12 May 08
Stupid man! I came off the moutain twice alive and kicking.
Posted by: Hen Broon, lanark on 1:00pm Mon 12 May 08
The man is anything but stupid, he carried the correct equipment which saved his life, and gave experience to the services who will continue to save lives.

I pray when I am in my sixties I will have the motivation to do stuff like this and not vegetate in front of a screen.
Posted by: JBlackley, Florida on 1:44pm Mon 12 May 08
Good story. Sounds like devices like this can really be life-savers.

What made me smile was the idea of those guys in Houston trying to understand the accents of the Fort William police.

Oh well, I'm glad it ended well.
Posted by: Anne, overhere on 1:51pm Mon 12 May 08
Hen B., you can take yer laptop to the highlands can't ye?
Posted by: doncrut, Manchester on 2:50pm Mon 12 May 08
My company Adventure Trading Ltd of Manchester is the distributor of the SPOT Messenger - the handheld emergency device used by Mr Vinther and other solo walkers - in the TGO Challenge across Scotland.

We were tracking their progress live on a map at http://www.adventure
tradingpost.co.uk/MA
P_TGO.html when we picked up his help message at 5 o'clock this morning which was swifly followed by a 999 message resulting in his speedy rescue.
Posted by: Alkie, NYC on 3:58pm Mon 12 May 08
European gets in trouble. Death is imminent. Call in America to save you.

Some things never change.
Posted by: Sykes, Cornwall on 12:19pm Tue 13 May 08
Alkie - get into the real world. I have done 11 of these Coast to Coast - on foot and self contained. (not in a mobile home!) The gentleman in question had an accident which can happen in remote country. I slipped down a water fall three years ago and had a cracked skull - it took two days to walk to the nearest road. I feel that in my troubles this SPOT system would have been superb. Of the 24 years this Challenge has been in operation the rescues could be counted on one hand. Not a bad record for East of the Pond.
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