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  • 7/7/2025
Close Calls On Camera S10E13 (20th July 2022)
Transcript
00:00A close call, a moment of danger when life can hang in the balance.
00:05It was absolute panic and fear.
00:08A split second where the outcome could go either way.
00:11They'd have been lucky if they'd have stayed conscious.
00:13The difference between disaster and survival.
00:16It's literally, that's all it takes.
00:20These are the people that have been there and lived to tell the tale.
00:24I was terrified. I thought I was going to die.
00:27It's a day they'll never forget. The day they had a close call.
00:47Today, on Close Calls.
00:49An emergency operator takes a call from a distressed young woman.
00:54Ambulance services, the patient's breathing.
00:57She's come off a horse and she's been pulled behind quite aggressively.
01:02OK, is she awake at the time?
01:03No, she's not responding.
01:06Her friend is badly injured.
01:08She's been dragged downhill by her bolting horse with her foot caught in the stirrup,
01:13crashing over rough ground.
01:14I walked down that hill, not knowing what I was going to find, when I...
01:21Sorry.
01:25And a father of three falls asleep inside his summer house snug.
01:31CCTV captures the moment his slumber ends with a terrifying explosion.
01:36I felt a burning pain, and when I opened my eyes, everywhere was on fire.
01:45Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.
01:57An air ambulance crew scour a wooded area, searching for two horse riders.
02:03One has fallen and been dragged along the ground by her bolting horse.
02:08Her friend discovers her unconscious and severely injured with a traumatic head injury.
02:14Shocked and frightened, she calls 999.
02:16She's just shaking, and I can't get her to wake up.
02:20Can you hear the noise, she's shaking?
02:22Oh, I can.
02:22I want to get her onto her back.
02:25Oh, my God.
02:27Oh, my God.
02:28Finding them in their remote location will be challenging.
02:32Terrified is the only way I can describe what I felt.
02:36Knowing that I had to do what I could to keep her alive.
02:46Science technician Sarah works at a secondary school and lives just outside Stoke with her mum, dad, and older brother.
02:59The 23-year-old enjoys her job, but her big love is horse riding.
03:05She first saddled up when she was just eight years old.
03:08I had quite a few friends who were into horse riding, and I think that's what kind of got me into it.
03:15And then I started having lessons for my birthday one year, and my mum thought that I'd grow out of it in, like, a few weeks' time.
03:24And then 15 years later, I'm still going, so it was an expensive birthday present.
03:33As a youngster, Sarah helped out at the local stables so she could be around horses and ride as often as possible.
03:40It's an adrenaline-filled activity, but it's also quite relaxing as well at the same time.
03:48Just being around the horses, there's something quite therapeutic about it, I think.
03:53The stables were also a good place to make friends, and it's where Sarah palled up with Gabby.
03:59Me and Gabby used to ride at the same riding school when we were really young.
04:05We used to go for riding lessons, and we used to go on, like, pony days.
04:09We were very mischievous kids.
04:12We were constantly laughing.
04:16You know, we were proper kids, just loving life outdoors.
04:20It was amazing. It was, yeah, it was so much fun.
04:24The pair stayed in touch over the years and later found themselves at nearby stable yards again,
04:29forming an even closer bond than when they were children.
04:32I'd say Gabby's just really friendly, really funny, always really caring,
04:38and just wants what's best for all of her friends.
04:44She's just a lovely person.
04:45The feeling is mutual.
04:47She's just such a lovely, sweet person.
04:50She's a properly, genuine human being, and I like that in people.
04:55Once she'd left school and was at university, Sarah exercised other people's horses.
05:00But eventually, she got Teddy, a cob, on loan from another horsewoman,
05:05who didn't have enough free time to devote to him.
05:09He's such a nice-natured, really nice, cuddly horse.
05:13He'd always sort of come to the front of his stable for a fuss,
05:16always really liked attention.
05:20And despite Teddy's tendency to occasionally be skittish,
05:23horse and rider formed a solid relationship.
05:26To start with, he didn't fully trust me, I don't think.
05:30He'd be a little bit more nervous around me.
05:32After a few months, he was quite happy with me around.
05:36Meanwhile, Gabby had bought her own horse, called Major,
05:39and with their animals stabled at close-by livery yards,
05:42the girls began riding out, just as they had as children.
05:47It's a really good area to ride in, to be honest.
05:50There's hundreds of acres of woods that you can just kind of go gallivanting around in.
05:54But one afternoon, a quiet hack in the countryside together
05:58takes a terrible turn, leaving Sarah in mortal danger,
06:03with only Gabby at her side to save her.
06:09It's a Saturday in June.
06:11Sarah and Gabby are taking advantage of the early summer sunshine,
06:15taking Teddy and Major for a ride in nearby woods.
06:18It's the first opportunity they've had all year due to the pandemic.
06:22We were just going to hack for a couple of hours and just kind of walk around,
06:27catch up and just enjoy kind of the woods because it was a beautiful day.
06:32The country lanes were quite good for having a nice little ride
06:35because they were quite quiet.
06:37You generally wouldn't get much traffic.
06:40There were quite a few nice hills as well.
06:43The girls meet up at a point between their stables
06:45and set off along the lanes to the woods.
06:48It was really nice to see her again and see her new horse as well.
06:52So we were chatting about uni life and catching up on
06:56what she'd been doing with Teddy and the horses she'd been riding.
07:00They take a route they both know will.
07:03As you go down the track, so you've got a central kind of solid track
07:07that's just been redone as a bridle path.
07:10We'd done the route quite a lot of times.
07:12I think Teddy and the fact that it was a fairly narrow pathway
07:15wasn't too much of an issue for him.
07:18Sarah and Gabby have been riding for a little more than two hours
07:21and are about to turn towards home when they come to a gate on the path.
07:26The gate tends to be open, but it wasn't.
07:31They have two options, open the gate whilst still mounted or get off.
07:35It was easier for me just to get off
07:38and then I could hop on, there was like a little sty
07:40that I could use to get on again.
07:45Gabby opens the gate while Sarah and Teddy stay back.
07:49So Sarah waited for me to get on before she went through the gate
07:53and then I got on and as I was turning,
07:57Sarah was going through the gate
07:59and she must have got four steps through the gate.
08:02And despite having done everything right,
08:06suddenly everything goes wrong.
08:08Sarah's horse bolts.
08:11He just went.
08:12He literally went from walk to gallop in a split second.
08:17It was a pretty bad bolt.
08:19You're kind of top-end scale of scary.
08:22The last thing I remember happening
08:24was walking through the gate
08:27and that's pretty much it.
08:29But Gabby remembers every single traumatic detail.
08:34I see her fall sideways
08:39and then it's like I blink and she's gone.
08:43I can see Teddy running.
08:44I can't see Sarah.
08:47She's been unseated
08:48with her foot still caught up in the stirrup
08:50and she's being dragged downhill
08:53along rough ground
08:54behind her out-of-control horse.
08:56I walked down that hill
08:59not knowing what I was going to find
09:03when I...
09:05Sorry.
09:10She's overwhelmed with fear.
09:13You fall off like that
09:14and you fall off downhill
09:15and you fall off hard.
09:18You're one hit and you're gone, you know.
09:20So I didn't know if she was alive.
09:24I found her behind.
09:26There's like a raised section
09:27and I was pretty, pretty sharpish
09:31on turn 999
09:33because I couldn't get her.
09:35I couldn't wake her up.
09:37This is that call.
09:38Ambulance service, is the patient breathing?
09:41She is, but she's making a really, like, growling noise.
09:46She's come off a horse
09:47and she's been pulled behind
09:48quite aggressively.
09:51OK, is she awake at the moment?
09:53No, she's not responding.
09:56Later, medics, including an air ambulance team,
10:00search for the girl's remote location.
10:03We've got a rough location,
10:05a good reference to where we believe Sarah is.
10:06However, due to the dense, wooded area,
10:09it was actually quite hard
10:10to identify where Sarah was.
10:12But Gabby fears they won't reach them in time.
10:15She's shaking
10:16and I can't get her to wake up.
10:19Oh, my God.
10:28Waltall, West Midlands.
10:29CCTV cameras watch over a family's home at night.
10:35One is focused on a summer house
10:37at the bottom of the garden.
10:39Inside, a young dad is fast asleep.
10:43Then, suddenly,
10:44a huge explosion rips through the building.
10:56Warehouse team leader and dad of three, Jack,
10:59lives in Walsall with his mum,
11:01dad, brother and sister.
11:03He's recently moved back to the family home
11:06after enduring a challenging year.
11:08My nan passed away.
11:10Then I ended up in hospital with COVID
11:14and ended up with blood clots in both legs,
11:18my heart artery and my both lungs.
11:22Craving solitude to aid his recovery,
11:24he found the perfect hideaway
11:26at the end of his parents' garden,
11:28in their summer house.
11:30It's a top-quality garden shed,
11:33built right,
11:35how it should be,
11:37comfortable.
11:39So there's furniture in there,
11:41a sofa,
11:42and some arcade games.
11:44It's the perfect place to relax.
11:47His parents even installed a gas heater
11:50to keep it warm for him
11:51during the colder months.
11:53It never got used that often.
11:56The only was me who was using it the most.
11:59I feel like it's more somewhere else.
12:01But one spring evening,
12:03his refuge turns from haven to horror,
12:06leaving Jack's life hanging in the balance.
12:08It's a cold Saturday afternoon
12:14at the end of March.
12:16Jack's at home with the rest of the family
12:17and is excited by the arrival
12:19of some recent online shopping.
12:22I thought I wanted to treat myself.
12:25When I tried the tracksuit on,
12:26it was really comfortable,
12:29fluffy inside,
12:30and I wanted to keep it on.
12:32So I did.
12:34After dinner,
12:35he decides to relax in the summer house,
12:37still wearing his new outfit.
12:40I went in about 7 o'clock at night,
12:43done some paperwork,
12:45and watched the movie.
12:46It's a cool evening,
12:47so Jack decides to warm the place up.
12:50He connects a brand-new gas canister
12:52to the portable heater.
12:54He had a security tag on,
12:56decided it's been safely checked.
13:00I put it in the summer house.
13:03I lit it.
13:04Ten minutes later,
13:05with the room at a comfortable temperature,
13:08Jack turns the heater off.
13:11Switched it off,
13:13then disconnected it.
13:15Everything seemed to be normal.
13:18The family has CCTV security cameras
13:21around the property,
13:22including one focused on the summer house.
13:25It's recording as Jack dozes off
13:27inside on the sofa,
13:29believing the heater to be safe.
13:31He's totally unaware
13:32gas is leaking into the enclosed space.
13:37At around 2am,
13:39something ignites the gas.
13:46The explosion sends flames
13:49shooting through the windows and doors,
13:51scorching the garden fence 10 feet away.
13:55Jack is right in the middle of the inferno.
13:57I felt a burning pain,
14:01a really bad burning pain.
14:03And when I opened my eyes,
14:06everywhere was on fire.
14:08He bolts for the door,
14:10the CCTV picking him up here
14:12as he sprints into the garden in flames.
14:14I ran out of the summer house
14:17and rolled out of the grass
14:20and cut myself out.
14:23Inside the main house,
14:24Jack's sister is woken by the blast.
14:27She alerts the rest of the family.
14:30And they all ran downstairs,
14:33come out to me,
14:34and my dad got me in the house
14:38putting cold water out of me.
14:41That's literally the last thing I can remember.
14:45Jack's mum calls 999.
14:47Ambulance and fire services
14:49are dispatched immediately.
14:51Michael Henderson
14:52is the fire service crew commander that day.
14:55The call came in
14:56in the early hours of the morning
14:57around about 2.30.
14:58We got the information
15:00and we made it out
15:03to the actual incident
15:04as safely and as quickly
15:05as we possibly could.
15:07They arrived to a shocking scene.
15:09It was a very highly charged
15:10emotional situation.
15:12We went into the living room
15:13after sending two firefighters
15:14around the rear of the property
15:16to make sure the fire was out.
15:18And we were met with Jack.
15:21He was very distressed.
15:22He was obviously in a lot of pain,
15:23shock.
15:25It got burns to his feet.
15:28His hands and his face.
15:30Michael and his team
15:31start to treat the burns.
15:33So using sheets of cling film,
15:36not wrapped around with sheets,
15:38put over the actual burns.
15:40That allows us then
15:41to lower the pain response level
15:43and also apply cooling agents
15:44to the outside.
15:46Paramedics arrive moments later.
15:48They give Jack gas and air
15:50to help relieve the pain.
15:52But he's struggling to breathe.
15:54If he's damaged his airway
15:56in any way through fire,
15:58the potential is for him
15:59to lose that airway.
16:00Obviously, that brings
16:02a whole new level of trouble with him.
16:04Medics decide to place Jack
16:06in an induced coma
16:08before taking him to nearby
16:09Queen Elizabeth Hospital
16:10in Birmingham.
16:12He's immediately rushed into surgery
16:14for skin graft treatment.
16:16Over the following week,
16:18still in a coma,
16:19he undergoes another 12 skin grafts
16:21and operations on his hands and face.
16:25Almost two weeks pass
16:26with little change in his condition.
16:29It's touch and go
16:30whether he'll pull through.
16:31My mum believes in spiritual things
16:37and because it's got my nan
16:39ashes in the living room
16:42in a home,
16:44I was saying,
16:45come on, mum,
16:45come on,
16:46bring him back.
16:48He don't need to go yet.
16:50He's got his three kids down here.
16:52Then, late on the 12th day,
16:55their prayers are answered
16:56when Jack's condition
16:57slowly starts to improve.
16:59He's brought around in the evening.
17:02The first person he sees
17:04is his mum.
17:05And I was touching her face
17:07and I just burst out in tears.
17:10And for the first time,
17:12he learns the extent of his injuries.
17:15The affected part of my body
17:17was my face,
17:19my head,
17:20my ears,
17:22my hands
17:23and a bit of my feet.
17:25It's now been seven months
17:32since the incident
17:33and Jack is hopeful
17:34of a full recovery.
17:36I still have ongoing physio.
17:40The doctors at the hospital
17:41have been brilliant.
17:44They said I will fully recover.
17:46Things take time.
17:48It's about three years' recovery.
17:51Fire officers considered
17:52a number of factors
17:53that could have caused the blast
17:55but couldn't reach a conclusion.
17:58Jack is convinced
17:59the new tracksuit
18:00he was wearing that day
18:01played its part
18:02in his survival.
18:05Whatever tracksuit was
18:06on my body,
18:08there's just worn our bones.
18:11They even singed your hair
18:12on me, nothing.
18:14If I didn't wear that,
18:15I wouldn't be, you know,
18:17because I'm normally
18:18in shorts and a vest.
18:20And having seen
18:23the CCTV footage,
18:25he realises
18:25how lucky he was
18:27to survive.
18:28I just can't believe
18:29it's happened to me.
18:31I'm lucky to be here.
18:34I know who was
18:35looking down on me
18:36in the way.
18:37It was my nan.
18:37The fire service
18:51warned against
18:52ever sleeping
18:53in a room
18:53with a lit gas fire.
18:55Jack thought
18:56he'd switched the fire off
18:57but he'll never know
18:59what caused
19:00the explosion.
19:01What he does know
19:01is that he was
19:03very lucky
19:03to survive that night.
19:05Now,
19:05back to a young woman
19:06who's had a terrifying fall
19:08whilst out horse riding.
19:09Her friend
19:10is desperate
19:11for help to arrive.
19:14Near Stoke-on-Trent
19:16in Staffordshire,
19:17horse rider Sarah
19:18has been dragged
19:19along the ground
19:19by her bolting horse.
19:22Her close friend
19:23Gabby riding with her
19:24has rushed to her aid
19:25and called for help.
19:28I was pretty sharpish
19:29onto 999
19:30because
19:31I couldn't get her,
19:33I couldn't wake her up.
19:34She's come off a horse
19:35and she's been pulled
19:36behind
19:37quite aggressively.
19:39OK,
19:40is she awake at the moment?
19:41No,
19:42she's not responding.
19:44Sarah is alive
19:45but unconscious.
19:48I don't know
19:48if you've ever heard
19:49a person knocked out.
19:51They make this
19:51awful noise
19:52and it's
19:54like snoring
19:55but
19:56kind of like
19:57a guttural
19:58throat.
20:00It's horrible.
20:01can you hear
20:03the noise she's shaking?
20:04I can.
20:05I'll wait
20:05to get her
20:06onto her back
20:06if you can.
20:08OK.
20:09On the other end
20:10of the line
20:10is West Midlands
20:11call handler
20:12Rebecca Hill.
20:14OK,
20:15and what's the exact
20:15location of the emergency?
20:18We're in
20:18Hanchurch Woods.
20:21I can try
20:22and find the grid mark
20:23that I'm at.
20:24Rebecca needs
20:25to find their location
20:26quickly
20:26and reassure Gabby.
20:28She was so panicked
20:30which is understandable
20:31and I knew
20:33from then
20:34it was going
20:34to be a serious
20:35call.
20:36It's complicated
20:37by the girl's
20:38location deep
20:39in the woods.
20:40You say you can
20:41use what three words?
20:43I think so.
20:45Oh my God.
20:47Oh my God.
20:48Gabby has
20:49the location
20:50finding app
20:50which uses
20:51three key words
20:52on her phone
20:53but in her panic
20:54she's struggling
20:55to use it.
20:56Because of the
20:57sketchy signal
20:58because of where
20:59we were in the woods
20:59it wasn't as easy
21:01as it could have been.
21:04I'm just trying
21:05to find where I am.
21:06OK,
21:06OK,
21:07let's try
21:08and calm down.
21:10They were in a bit
21:10of a hard location
21:11for us to pick up on.
21:13I had to bring
21:13my supervisor
21:14into the call.
21:16Cycle,
21:17Pages Island.
21:18Sarah.
21:19Pages Island.
21:20Sarah.
21:21I'm trying
21:22to find you.
21:24I felt like
21:25I was a crying
21:26bowling mess
21:27of, like,
21:28insanity.
21:29Her panic
21:29is audible
21:30on the call.
21:32She's shaking.
21:33OK.
21:34She had a fear.
21:35I don't know.
21:36She's just shaking
21:38and I can't get her
21:39to wake up.
21:40Despite her fear,
21:41Gabby tries
21:42to comfort her friend.
21:44Sarah.
21:45All right.
21:46Sarah, you're OK?
21:47You're all right.
21:48Sarah.
21:50Sarah's drifting
21:51in and out
21:52of consciousness.
21:53At her side,
21:54alone in the woods,
21:55Gabby is overwhelmed.
21:57Terrified
21:58is the only way
21:59I can describe
22:00what I felt.
22:02And knowing
22:04that I had
22:05to do
22:05what I could
22:07to save,
22:08like,
22:08keep her alive.
22:10We have got help
22:11on the way,
22:12so I'm going to stay
22:13with you
22:13until they get there,
22:15OK?
22:15I'm sorry,
22:16you too.
22:17OK.
22:18I was trying
22:19to get Gabby
22:20to calm down
22:20as much as she possibly
22:22could
22:22in order for me
22:23to get the information
22:24that I needed
22:25to get the crew
22:26there quicker to her.
22:27She kept me focused
22:31and gave me
22:34that help
22:35that I needed
22:36to kind of stay
22:38in control,
22:39I guess.
22:40OK.
22:41Help is being arranged
22:43for her, OK?
22:45Rebecca dispatches
22:46three ambulances
22:47and the air ambulance.
22:50Critical care paramedic
22:51Tom is one
22:52of the airborne team.
22:53It was really important
22:57for us to get there
22:57quickly.
22:58This category
22:59was a Category 1 call
23:00which highlights
23:02that there's
23:02a time-critical injury
23:03where they're potentially
23:04not breathing
23:05or in cardiac arrest.
23:06Their estimated
23:07flight time
23:08is 12 minutes.
23:09We've got a rough location
23:11and good reference
23:12where we believe
23:12Sarah is.
23:13What we can find
23:14initially is a large field,
23:16however,
23:16due to the dense,
23:17wooded area,
23:18it was actually
23:19quite hard
23:19to identify
23:20where Sarah was
23:21in within that facility.
23:23Gabby's relief
23:24at their arrival
23:25is captured
23:26on the call.
23:27It's a helicopter!
23:30But it's short-lived.
23:32They're looking for us
23:33but they can't see us
23:34because we're
23:34under tree cover.
23:35I can hear it.
23:36It's really close
23:37to the helicopter.
23:38I can just hear it.
23:40The tree's moving.
23:41It's just,
23:41just like,
23:42to the right of us.
23:44The road ambulance team
23:45reaches the scene first,
23:47having been flagged down
23:48by a passing hiker.
23:51Hello?
23:52Stop it!
23:53Oh, my God,
23:54she's had an ambulance run!
23:56Oh, my God!
23:57Gabby is overcome.
23:59Oh, my God!
24:01Oh, my God!
24:02You went back on time!
24:04Gabby,
24:05you've done really,
24:06really well,
24:06okay?
24:08Okay!
24:10Next on scene
24:11is Tom,
24:12who rapidly assesses
24:13Sarah's injuries.
24:14It was quite clear
24:15that she had symptoms
24:16of a traumatic brain injury
24:18where she wasn't behaving normally.
24:20She wasn't conscious,
24:22but she wasn't completely unconscious,
24:24and she was what we'd probably
24:25categorise as an agitated state.
24:29I remember thinking
24:30how incredible he was.
24:32Our first treatment plan
24:33is to assess
24:34that she hasn't got
24:35any other significant injuries
24:36to make sure
24:37that she hasn't got
24:37any significant fractures
24:38or she's not bleeding anywhere.
24:40We then recognised
24:41that Sarah probably
24:42needed to go to sleep,
24:43and she needed
24:43to go to sleep quickly.
24:45The thing that scared me the most
24:47was they put her
24:48into a coma there.
24:50You know,
24:50on the scene,
24:52that's never good.
24:53I don't know
24:54if she's coming back from that.
24:55Sarah needs to go to hospital,
24:56and she needs to go to hospital now,
24:57and she needs to go there
24:58pretty quickly.
25:00Sarah is taken
25:01to the trauma unit
25:02at the Royal Stoke University Hospital.
25:05She spends the next three weeks
25:07in a coma.
25:08I expected her
25:10to have more bodily injuries.
25:13I didn't expect
25:14the brain injury
25:15to be quite so catastrophic.
25:18Kind of every day
25:19that she didn't wake up
25:22was a day that you thought,
25:24she's never going to wake up.
25:27During that time,
25:29Gabby and Sarah's mum
25:30stayed in constant contact.
25:33I was at the yard,
25:36and I just cried
25:37when I knew she was okay
25:39and awake.
25:43Yeah, I just...
25:44I was in floods of tears.
25:47For Sarah,
25:48it was a confusing time.
25:50I wasn't talking
25:51at that point,
25:52to start with.
25:53When I first wake up,
25:55I could move my legs
25:58and my hands
25:59and that.
26:01But I couldn't walk
26:03or anything.
26:05Sarah spent
26:05two and a half months
26:07on the trauma unit
26:07and a further three months
26:09in rehab
26:10at the Haywards Hospital.
26:11It was probably
26:12the longest I'd ever been
26:13away from home.
26:14But, yeah,
26:15my parents put up
26:17banners
26:17saying,
26:18welcome home.
26:19I've got a new little
26:20bunny waiting for me.
26:22She's had plenty of time
26:24to reflect on the outcome
26:25of her terrible fall.
26:27I didn't break
26:28any bones.
26:29I didn't have any
26:30sort of
26:32other organ damage.
26:34So,
26:35I was incredibly lucky,
26:37really.
26:38It was horrific
26:39and it was
26:40an awful accident,
26:42but
26:42it highlighted
26:44how incredible
26:45our emergency services are
26:46and how
26:47Sarah is just
26:49an incredible
26:49human being.
26:5218 months later,
26:53the two best friends
26:54are together again
26:55at the stables.
26:57Sarah is back
26:58in the saddle,
26:59but on a different horse.
27:01The first time
27:02I got back on,
27:03it was a really nice
27:03little pony
27:04at the yard
27:05that I'm at now,
27:06so it was safe.
27:07My mum was quite happy
27:08that I was doing it
27:09in that way.
27:10I'd say
27:13there's a number
27:14of things
27:14that
27:15probably saved my life.
27:17One,
27:18my helmet.
27:19Without that,
27:20there's no doubt
27:21that I wouldn't
27:22be here right now.
27:24Two,
27:25probably the fact
27:26that they were able
27:27to send
27:28the air ambulance
27:29out with the doctors.
27:31That hospital
27:32treatment at the scene
27:34definitely
27:35saved my life.
27:37And then,
27:39three,
27:39probably just
27:40the way
27:40that Gabby
27:41responded as well.
27:43She's probably
27:43a better rider
27:45than me again now.
27:46You know,
27:46she's a fantastic
27:48little jockey.
27:49She is very,
27:50very lucky
27:51to actually be alive.
27:53She was unbelievably
27:54close to never
27:55coming back.
27:57And it's terrifying
27:57to think of how close
27:59she actually was
28:00to not being here
28:02anymore.
28:02thank goodness
28:13Gabby was with
28:14Sarah that day.
28:15See you next time
28:16for more
28:16Close Calls.
28:17Close Calls.
28:31Close Calls.
28:32Close Calls.
28:32Close Calls.
28:32Close Calls.
28:33Close Calls.
28:33Close Calls.
28:34Close Calls.
28:34Close Calls.
28:34Close Calls.
28:34Close Calls.
28:35Close Calls.
28:35Close Calls.
28:35Close Calls.
28:35Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:36Close Calls.
28:37Close Calls.
28:37Close Calls.
28:38Close Calls.
28:38Close Calls.
28:39Close Calls.
28:39Close Calls.
28:40Close Calls.
28:40Close Calls.
28:41Close Calls.
28:41Close Calls.
28:41Close Calls.
28:41Close Calls.
28:42Close Calls.
28:42Close Calls.
28:43Close Calls.

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