Teen rescued on live TV watched as sand vanished
Kaan was at Wells-next-the-Sea, in Norfolk, on Friday enjoying the hot weather with his friends and mum.
BBC Look East cameras captured the moment he became stranded by the tide and were still rolling when a RNLI crew carried out the rescue.
Kaan, who had swam out to a sandbar after being carried by the tide, said: "I didn't realise how far out I was until I saw the BBC News. I didn't realise how far out and scary it actually was."
BBC journalist Debbie Tubby had been reporting from the beach as cameras saw Kaan stranded on the sand bar shortly after the regional news programme started airing at 18:30 BST.
Boy's sea rescue captured on live TV report
After continuing with other reports, the programme then returned to Tubby less than 10 minutes later.
Footage showed the sand covered by water, with the boy being helped by the RNLI crew.
The BBC was broadcasting from the beach after 40 people had been cut off by the tide the previous weekend.
Alongside friends, Kaan had been playing in the water until he put his feet down and realised he could no longer touch the ground.
He said: "It's really scary and worrying... It could really end up tragic and dangerous.
"I was very thankful and very pleased that they [RNLI] came. They are great at their job. They are wonderful people."
Watching on, his mother, Sam, had entered the water up to knee-height but could not go any further due to the power of the tide.
She said: "I felt confident in the fact I could see them [RNLI] coming down the ramp, and I knew they were on their way."
Once her son was rescued, she said the feeling of relief turned to slight embarrassment.
"It's worse when you're from the area that these things happen... Now it's happened to us, it's made me even more aware of it.
"If you're a tourist here on holiday, it makes it even worse," she said.
"We are lucky to have [the RNLI] just there, where it is a prime position for things happening, or even walkers who get cut off."
Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Why do people get cut off by the tide at Wells?
Boy's sea rescue captured on live TV report
RNLI

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
7 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Rich Londoners Find Money Can't Buy ACs As Temperatures Soar
By Updated on Save As Londoners struggle to adapt to rising temperatures, some of the city's wealthier denizens are finding that money can't always deliver the relief they seek. With temperatures in some parts of the London Underground recently exceeding levels deemed fit for cattle, climate change is well and truly transforming the experience of living in Britain's capital. The response has been a surge in demand for air-conditioning units in high-end homes.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Met Office downplays reports of 600-mile long band of rain hitting UK
The Met Office has responded to claims that a huge rain storm is heading the UK's way in late August. Reports that Hurricane Erin will cause a 600-mile-long band of rain to sweep through the UK later this month have been downplayed by the Met Office. Although not expected to make direct landfall, Erin is forecast to bring heavy rain to the eastern coast of the United States and Caribbean islands after strengthening over the weekend. According to some media reports, citing weather data from WXCharts, the effects of Erin will be felt in the UK in the shape of a rain storm either 400 or 600 miles long hitting the country on 28 August. The reports claim it will bring heavy rainfall to cities such as Belfast, Glasgow, Birmingham, London and Manchester, with Cardiff and Bristol being particularly badly affected. But the Met Office told Yahoo News UK that an accurate forecast is too difficult to predict 10 days in advance – but it did say there is a chance of wet and windy weather later this month. A spokesperson said the date reported when the rain storm could hit "is a way away and weather forecasts become clearer closer to the time". They added: "Our short-range forecast uses current observations, data and modelling, whereas the long range is based on trends and focuses on average conditions over a broad area and time frame. "With that in mind, the long range for the rest of August does mention the potential for changeable conditions and a small chance of widely wetter and windier weather developing." In its long-range forecast for Friday 22 August to Sunday 31 August, the Met Office says the beginning of this period will be marked by fine and dry weather. However, it says: "This will be increasingly eroded from the west as frontal systems start to move in from the Atlantic through the weekend, leading to more changeable conditions." In addition, a deep area of low pressure is likely in the North Atlantic Ocean because of Hurricane Erin, currently threatening the east coast of the US. The forecast says: "The changeable period will likely continue through the last week of August, especially in the north and west, with a small chance of widely wetter and windier weather developing." Will Hurricane Erin affect the UK weather? While some media outlets suggest a massive deluge of rain as a result of Hurricane Erin, BBC meteorologist Simon King said that the low-pressure system – now over 3,000 miles away – won't bring extreme weather as it is 'physically impossible'. He explained: 'Rain doesn't fall in a continuous sheet stretching for hundreds of miles so there'll be no 'wall of rain' to come with it either.' While Erin is unlikely to bring extreme weather, King does concede that it could result in wet and windy weather in the UK from the middle of next week. He added: 'While Erin is still over 3,000 miles away from the UK, it will eventually weaken as it moves across the North Atlantic and arrive to the west of the UK as an area of low pressure – a process we often see in the UK from mid-August as the hurricane season starts to pick up.' However, he said there are 'still lots of uncertainties with the forecast' as it is over a week away, and after the upcoming bank holiday weekend. A Met Office spokesperson told The Mirror that there is also 'uncertainty' about the weather prospects for the middle of next week due to the nature of longer-range predictions. What about this week? Following last week's fourth heatwave of the summer, the rest of this week is set to remain largely dry, following a warm start. Sunday's highest temperature was 27.7C in Somerset, while West Sussex and Inverness, Scotland, also reached 27C. Tuesday is set to be cloudy, but some bright and sunny spells could break through. Northern areas may experience some drizzle, while the south-west of England is at risk of heavy showers. Maximum temperatures are expected to fall to 24C by Wednesday and Thursday, the Met Office said, but could go back up to the high 20s again by the weekend. How accurate are weather forecasts? The Met Office says that thanks to technology, its four-day forecast is now just as accurate as its one-day forecast was 30 years ago. It uses its Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) model for its forecasts, verified by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO). The Met Office says that in the past 12 months that 92% of its three-hourly temperature forecasts - given between three to seven days ahead of time - have been accurate to within either 2°C above or below on the current day. However, it said that because weather is a "chaotic" system, the slightest shift in conditions can lead to inaccuracies in predicting what is to come, meaning it is better to rely on a number of forecast models as opposed to just one. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
18 hours ago
- Yahoo
Survivors claw through rubble after deadly Pakistan cloudburst
In the middle of the night, by the glow of their mobile phones, rescuers and villagers dug through the concrete remains of flattened houses after massive rocks crashed down on a remote Pakistani village following a cloudburst. Using hammers, shovels, and in many cases their bare hands to clear the rubble and open blocked pathways, they searched through the debris in darkness, with no electricity in the area. In just minutes, a torrent of water and rocks swept down on the village of Dalori on Monday, destroying at least 15 houses, damaging several others and killing nine people. Around 20 villagers are still trapped under the debris. "A huge bang came from the top of the mountain, and then dark smoke billowed into the sky," Lal Khan, a 46-year-old local labourer, told AFP. "A massive surge of water gushed down with the sliding mountain," he added. The cloudburst above Dalori came a few days into heavy monsoon rains that have already killed more than 350 people across mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, along the northwest border with Afghanistan. Torrential rains in northern Pakistan since Thursday have caused flooding and landslides that have swept away entire villages, with around 200 people still missing. And authorities have warned of fresh flash floods in the coming days. Khan recalled seeing the hand of his neighbour sticking out of the rubble, where rescuers later retrieved her body along with those of her four children. "We are absolutely helpless. We don't have the means to tackle this calamity that nature has sent upon us," Khan added. - 'Like an apocalyptic movie' - Fellow resident Gul Hazir said not one but several cloudbursts from two sides of the village struck the remote valley. "It was like an apocalyptic movie. I still can't believe what I saw," Hazir said. "It was not the water that struck first, but a massive amount of rocks and stones that smashed into the houses," Hazir told AFP. Local administration official Usman Khan told AFP at the site that many of the houses had been built in the middle of the stream bed, which worsened the scale of destruction. "There was no way for the water to recede after the cloudburst struck at least 11 separate locations in the area," he said. "It is immensely challenging to carry out operations here, as heavy machinery cannot pass through the narrow alleys." Saqib Ghani, a student who lost his father and was searching for other relatives, tried to claw through the concrete with his bare hands before rescuers pulled him away and villagers gave him water. The single road leading to the village was demolished at several points, while gravel was scattered across the settlement. Despite the challenging conditions, excavators were working at several sites to remove debris that had clogged the drainage channels and blocked the flow of water. Dalori has already held funerals for five victims, while women mourned in darkened homes with no electricity since the disaster. In the village's narrow alleys, unattended cattle wandered freely amid the devastation. "I will not live here anymore," said a grieving woman, draped in a large shawl, as she followed a coffin being carried through the street. Over the past few days, the villagers had been collecting money to help people in neighbouring flood-hit areas, until they too were overwhelmed by disaster and lost everything. "We didn't know we would be needing help ourselves," Hazir added. zz/mtp