Fowey lifeboatmen praised a fisherman who radioed the Coastguard for help after having ’tailpiped’ his five-metre open fishing boat.

Tailpiping is when the propeller of the boat gets caught in the ropes from the fishing gear.

Maurice and Joyce Hardy, Fowey’s Trent Class all-weather RNLI lifeboat, was launched on Wednesday (April 13) with seven volunteer crew members on board to rescue the Boy Jowan which was anchored by its own crab pots to the sea bed with no way to free itself.  The lifeboat arrived on scene within 20 minutes of being called to find the fisherman fending his boat off the rocks with a boat hook

The fishing gear had been blown much closer to the land than it had been set during the storms over the weekend and this had made picking it all up far more difficult.

On arrival a rope was thrown to the casualty from the bow of the lifeboat and the vessel was dragged away from the rocks.  The inflatable XP boat had been made ready in case close work was needed with two volunteers in dry-suits, but the tow worked.

The fishing boat was moored alongside the lifeboat with its stern by the lifeboat’s bow to avoid risking the Trent’s own propeller. The gear was then retrieved from the sea bed, at first by hand and then using a grappling hook and the capstan on the bow of the Trent.

The boat was then towed into Gorran and tied to the inner quay and the gear was dropped nearby where it would dry out and be salvageable as the tide dropped.

Coxswain Jonathan Pritchard said: ’We were delighted to help such a well prepared and well equipped casualty. He made the task of rescuing him so much safer and easier.’