A teenager from Tintagel in Cornwall survived a 100ft fall down a cliff,
only to be bitten by a venomous snake.
Brock Leach, 14, was on the clifftop at Trebarwith Strand on Sunday with
his 16-year-old brother Josh when he slipped on some lichen and toppled
off the cliff, rolling down and bouncing off outcroppings and rocks
before landing on a ledge.
Josh saw him fall and, despite being frightened and shocked himself,
went to his brother's rescue, scrambling down the steep incline to reach
Brock's side and, seeing he was still conscious and talking, helping
him to a higher spot away from the incoming tide before telling him to
stay put while he went to find help.
"I got him out of the way to a higher ledge because the sea was coming
in," said Josh. "I said to stay there, but he wanted to go with me."
Unknown to the boys, Brock had fractured his pelvis as well as suffering
severe bruising, but they managed to make their way a little higher up
the cliff before Brock suddenly felt a sharp pain in the hand he'd been
using to help pull himself along.
In another freak stroke of bad luck, the youngster had been bitten by an
adder – the only venomous snake native to the UK.
In pain, and feeling the adder venom take effect, Brock couldn't go any
further so Josh scrabbled to the top of the cliff and flagged down some
passers-by who called the emergency services.
Paramedics, lifeguards, coastguards and a helicopter from RAF Chivenor
were on the scene within minutes and Brock was flown to the North Devon
Hospital in Barnstaple where – his arm swollen to three times its normal
size – he was given anti-venom for the adder bite and
kept in overnight before being allowed home to recover.
The boys' mother, Tracey, said: "I'm really proud of them both.
They were both very, very scared. Josh saw his brother disappear and
heard him scream as he went over the ledge. He didn't panic. He
scrambled down and he made sure he told the people who came to help that
it was an adder bite."
Tracey, 47, heard the rescue helicopter from their home in Trewarmett
while she was speaking to her husband Dean, 43, online from Vietnam,
where he is working as an ocean exploration scientist.
She said it had momentarily crossed their minds to worry that their boys
were somehow involved but she had looked out the window and seen two
small figures in the distance watching the helicopter and thought they
were Josh and Brock. She didn't know what had happened until Josh
arrived home accompanied by a coastguard, saying: "Don't worry, mum.
It's Brock, but he's okay."
Their relieved mother said: "It could have been a lot worse. Brock took a
real battering but his head and face are completely unscathed. He had a
very lucky escape."
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