A MINEHEAD lifeboat crew carried out a dramatic rescue of a walker stuck on one of the most dangerous locations on the local coastline.

The volunteers snatched the man to safety after he became trapped at the bottom of 600-foot cliffs yesterday evening (Sunday, January 16).

He had been attempting to make his way along a boulder beach just east of Foreland Point, near Lynmouth, but was forced to scramble up onto rocks as the tide rose.

He called coastguards on his mobile and within minutes Minehead’s RNLI crew had launched the station’s Atlantic 85 and D class boats.

The Atlantic 85, with helm Richard Gay in command, was first on scene and quickly located the 30-year-old man.

Richard said: “He was really in a hopeless position, perched on a rock, with the cliffs rising sheer behind him and the tide still coming in.”

The crew anchored the boat and veered down the anchor line to within a metre of the point where the man was stranded.

Crew member Andrew Escott entered the water with a line, scrambled over the rocks and extricated the casualty.

Richard said: “There was a bit of a sea running, but we managed to put the boat in at exactly the right spot. Andrew told him he was going to have to get wet but he was happy to accept that knowing that at least he was going to be safe.”

The man was checked over en route to Lynmouth harbour where he was put ashore five minutes after being rescued.

Minehead RNLI operations manager Dr John Higgie said: “There are some really fierce currents running there and it takes a high degree of skill to get a boat in that close in under the cliffs in any kind of sea. This was a real text-book job.

“Luckily this chap had the good sense to be carrying some means of attracting attention – his phone – otherwise the outcome could have been very different.”

Meanwhile, the Minehead crew have moved into temporary accommodation as their lifeboat house undergoes a £1million extension and upgrade to provide a new boat hall for the D class and changing rooms, showers and training facilities for the crew, enlarged workshops and retail space and a public viewing gallery. The work is expected to take nine months.