
Rare ponies released on Horwich moorland in conservation drive
Exmoor ponies, mentioned in the Doomsday Book of 1086, have previously been used to graze land in conservation schemes across the UK. At Horwich, it is hoped they will eat the soft rush which, according to the Environment Bank spokesman, has "overtaken much of the site".Its pervasive growth is thought to have driven out waders like lapwing, curlew and redshank by holding back other flora."By reducing the extent of the soft rush, [the ponies will] allow other species to come through," the spokesman added. It is hoped the ponies, which belong to local breeder and vet Michael Dewhurst, will create space for wildflowers and other plant species by grazing and trampling over the land.
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BBC News
28-07-2025
- BBC News
Parents of boy killed in Somerset coach crash thank community
The parents of a 10-year-old boy who died in a coach crash have publicly thanked the "amazing community" supporting them. Oliver Price, a pupil at Minehead Middle School in Minehead, Somerset, suffered a fatal head injury when the coach he was travelling on with his classmates left the A396 in Exmoor and slid down a 6m (20ft) slope on 17 July.A huge emergency response descended on the scene in the aftermath of the crash, with members of the public in the Wheddon Cross area quickly volunteering to support rescue and relief efforts. In a statement shared via police, Oliver's parents Lucy and Matthew said the support they had received since his death had been "overwhelming". In the days after the crash dozens of people left cards and bunches of flowers in tribute to Oliver and the other children and adults injured in the incident outside the people were taken to hospital to be treated for their injuries, with two children and one adult remaining in hospital. 'So very grateful' In their statement Lucy and Matthew said they had seen "first-hand the incredible response from the community" after the "awful collision"."We are so very grateful to all the many emergency service workers who responded initially and those who continue to provide support in the aftermath, through the police investigation and the hospital teams who continue to look after those who were injured," they said. They also thanked the team at the Rest and Be Thankful pub in Wheddon Cross, which opened its doors as a rest centre during the incident - allowing paramedics to treat the injured and parents to reunite with their children. "We send our best wishes and hopes for a speedy recovery to the other children and staff on the bus, particularly those who are still in hospital," they continued. "You are all in our thoughts."The support we've received from our amazing community has been overwhelming. To those who left kind messages, or flowers outside the school, we want to say thank you." The coach was on its way back to Minehead Middle School from a day trip to Exmoor, carrying up to 70 people, when it crashed. Lucy and Matthew said they were "grateful beyond words" for the staff and parents at the "wonderful" school, as well as the "love we've been shown" by family and friends. "Finally, we would also like to pass on our thanks to the police investigation team for their support and ongoing hard work," they added. "We know this is a complex and emotive investigation but we appreciate their regular updates and continued efforts."


Times
18-07-2025
- Times
Minehead school bus crash: pupil who died was ten-year-old boy
A ten-year-old boy who died in a coach crash in Somerset has been described as 'so kind to everyone'. On Friday flowers were laid outside the school to which he was returning after a trip to the zoo. Twenty-one passengers were taken to hospital, some with serious injuries, when the 70-seater vehicle swerved off a country road between the villages of Wheddon Cross and Timberscombe on Exmoor on Thursday at about 3pm. The bus had been carrying pupils, aged nine and ten, back to Minehead Middle School after an end-of-term trip to Exmoor Zoo. On Friday, police confirmed that the child who died in the crash was a boy aged ten. He was named locally as Oliver. Formal identification has not yet been completed A steady stream of people, including pupils and classmates of the boy, gathered outside the school gates. One card described him as 'so kind to everyone'. It read: 'Dear Oliver, I am not really sure what to write, but we will all miss you. You were so kind to everyone and you are a very good friend and could always make me laugh with with your jokes.' Another message said: 'RIP Oliver, we sure are going to miss your infectious smile. Shine bright angel. Thinking of your family.' The coach crashed at about 3.15pm on Thursday, on a steep and winding section of the A396, which is used daily by school buses. Glass had shattered at the front of the coach. Having gone over the edge of the steep road, it had rolled onto its roof as it slid 20ft down a ravine. An off-duty firefighter travelling behind it immediately began trying to free passengers. A person who spoke to the firefighter said: 'He didn't think the guy was driving too fast. He said he just seemed to go off the road.' The Times understands the driver and about ten children were trapped in the wreckage and had to be cut out. Two children were taken to Bristol Royal Hospital for Children by air ambulance, while four children and three adults remain in hospital in Somerset. Emily Manning, ten, had a lucky escape when she was stopped from boarding the coach involved in the fatal crash because it was already full. After laying flowers with her father, Nick Manning, on Friday, she said: 'I wanted to be on the second coach because that's where my friends were but there were too many people so I got off. I felt upset because my friends were on that bus.' Manning, 48, a window cleaner, said his heart dropped when he received a phone call at work saying there had been an accident. 'It's every parent's nightmare, it's absolutely awful. I had constant messages and phone calls checking Emily was OK. People were panicking,' he said. One mother said her daughter was 'bruised battered and very traumatised' but had 'no broken bones', adding: 'She was so lucky.' SWNS Darcey Griffiths, ten, said that one moment she and her friends were talking about their visit and the next she realised she was dangling upside down. 'I remember the coach driving along. It didn't feel like anything was about to happen, but then it just rolled over,' she told The Daily Telegraph. 'I was upside down in my seat, and it was only my seatbelt keeping me in place. I didn't know what to do, but I saw a friend of mine undo her seatbelt and fall down, so I did the same.' She said she and her friends made their way along the coach's upturned ceiling until they found the door and crawled out. The South Western Ambulance Service sent 20 double-crewed ambulances, three air ambulances, a command team and two hazardous area response teams. The fire service sent eight fire engines and 60 firefighters. A police helicopter was also dispatched. Villagers in Wheddon Cross, who were nearest the crash site, opened their pub and village as a rescue hub. Isobel Wood, 26, a paralegal, was picking up a parcel in the Post Office when she saw a police cordon closing the road to Minehead and heard air ambulances overhead. 'They said a bus had gone over, and knowing the road we hoped it hadn't gone into the ravine,' she said. She raced home and told Jill Thompson, 68, her neighbour and the chairwoman of Moorland Hall. Thompson, an events manager, said the first child survivor to be reunited with his parents was grazed and terrified when he climbed out of a police car and ran into his mother's arms. 'It was devastating but everybody in the village was running down to see what they could do,' she said. We have all had children on the buses growing up, so it's hit all of us. It could have happened to our children and it's absolutely horrific. We have all been so upset.' The village hall WILL HUMPHRIES FOR THE TIMES Eric Norman, the landlord of the Rest and Be Thankful Inn, opened his doors to the emergency services. The Post Office provided tea and coffee for those in the village hall, and the pub made sure everyone was fed and watered. Wood said: 'It was the walking wounded going into the pub and the poor children were terrified. Some had blood on their clothes that very much wasn't their own, others had bandaged heads and blood coming down their faces and necks.' Peter Prior-Sankey, the director of Ridlers Coaches, said the driver was 'in a stable condition in hospital, but with a number of injuries'. The driver and school staff were described by Chief Superintendent Mark Edgington, of Avon and Somerset police, as 'deeply distressed' by the 'truly tragic' incident. A teacher from the school posted a message online to her 'amazing students', saying she 'couldn't be prouder of all of you today [and] how incredibly brave you have been'. MATTHEW HORWOOD/GETTY IMAGES 'You have looked after each in what was a life-changing event,' she wrote. 'We will get through this together. I am so grateful to my wonderful colleagues during this time who were also fighting to help as many people as we could. My deepest condolences to all parents, carers, family and friends involved. 'Finally, thank you to the emergency services who have saved many lives today and to the brilliant public who went out of their way to look after myself and most importantly the wonderful students of Minehead Middle School.''


Daily Mail
18-07-2025
- Daily Mail
Schoolgirl, 10, dodged crash that killed pupil and injured 21 when she wasn't allowed to board full coach - as off-duty firefighter who saved youngsters is hailed a hero
A schoolgirl has revealed she was stopped from boarding the coach involved in a fatal crash in Somerset because it was full. Following a day out with year five classmates at Exmoor Zoo, Emily Manning, 10, had hoped to ride back on the same coach as her friends. But when she tried to join them she was told there were no more seats so instead she went on the other coach which made it back safely to Minehead Middle School. One child died and 21 people were injured when the second coach crashed off a winding stretch of road, flipped onto its roof and slid down a steep bank. Emily was among dozens of pupils, parents and local residents who laid flowers outside the front gates of the school - which is closed today following the tragedy. After laying flowers for her friends and classmates outside the school this morning she said: 'I wanted to be on the second coach because that's where my friends were but there were too many people so I got off. 'Everybody was in front of me and that meant I couldn't. I felt upset because my friends were on that bus but also I felt lucky.' Dad Nick Manning, a window cleaner, said his heart dropped when he received a phone call at work asking whether he had picked her up yet. Mr Manning, 48, said: 'She went to the Exmoor Zoo but on the way back she was on the other bus. 'She wanted to go on it but it was already full, there were too many people because her mates and boyfriend were on that one. 'I just feel incredibly grateful that she wasn't. I got phoned when I was still at work saying have you picked up Emily yet because something terrible has happened. 'It's every parent's nightmare, it's absolutely awful. I had constant messages and phone calls checking Emily was ok. People were panicking.' An off-duty firefighter travelling behind a Somerset school coach which overturned was able to save the lives of children by immediately starting to free them minutes after the collision, it emerged yesterday evening. Emergency services rushed to the remote rural location, where one child was pronounced dead at the scene, while 21 others were taken to hospital with various injuries. He praised by Gavin Ellis of Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service at the press conference who said: 'I'm grateful to the off-duty firefighter who was travelling behind the coach at the point of the collision who was able to start taking immediate [action] to start releasing those casualties from the bus.' Another parent, John Delany, 30, said he drives the 'nasty' stretch of road where the accident happened every day to commute to his job in an agricultural showroom - he has witnessed other cars crash off in recent months and almost lost control himself. He said: 'That road is a nasty piece of road, I drive it every day and there was a peugeot that crashed in the same place in the past few months but luckily they didn't go over the edge. 'The water just sits on the road and you can easily just go straight down. The corner where it happened I only go around at 25mph so you can imagine with a bus that is much heavier it's easy to have an accident.' John, who has two daughters at the school, Rosie, eight, and Novayah, six, who were too young to be on the zoo trip added: 'We know one of the children who was rushed to hospital but his mum let us know that he is ok. 'The girls were in an absolute state last night wanting to know if their friends were ok. who works in an agricultural showroom The Reverend Philip Butcher, Vicar of Minehead, said: 'It has been an immense shock and this tragedy and it is still unfolding. 'There's a huge network of people involved here and we are all trying to come to terms with what happened. 'Yesterday was a desperately traumatic day for everybody here but everybody came together, it was heartwarming to see, even in the most desperate circumstances.' Chief Superintendent Mark Edgington of Avon and Somerset Police confirmed the fatality: 'We can confirm tonight that one child has sadly died. 'A formal identification process will need to be carried out, but our thoughts and sympathies are with their family, who we are in contact with. 'A specially-trained officer will be providing them with support.' Minehead Middle School had listed the zoo visit on its website as part of its 'Enrichment Week' activities for Year Five pupils. Floral tributes were being left outside Minehead Middle School on Friday morning. Staff and students from the nearby Kingsmead School in Wiveliscombe had left a condolence card with a bunch of flowers. The card said: 'Our thoughts are with all the children, parents, staff and transport.' Minehead Middle School, which caters for pupils aged between nine and 14, and is five days away from the end of term, remained closed on Friday. One local was in tears when she came to drop a bouquet of flowers. She said: 'I'm still in shock. I had a child in this school she's 18 now. 'We are a tight knit community around here. It affects the whole community around here. I've just been down to Tesco and everyone is red eyed. 'Everyone I talk to bursts into tears. 'The children were year 5s. I know people with children in the school. 'My friend's niece was involved she's ok but she had to get stitches in her leg. 'You feel so helpless there's nothing you can do.' One of the school's teachers posted on Facebook: 'My amazing students, I couldn't be prouder of all of you, how incredibly brave you have been. 'You have looked after each in what was a life-changing event, we will get through this together. 'I feel so lucky to be your teacher. I am so grateful to my wonderful colleagues during this time who were also fighting to help as many people as we could. 'My deepest condolences to all parents, carers, family and friends involved. 'Finally, thank you to the emergency services who have saved many lives and to the brilliant public who went out of their way to look after myself and most importantly the wonderful students of Minehead Middle School.' The driver of a school coach which crashed near Minehead, Somerset, is in a stable condition, the bus company's owner has said. Ridlers Coaches director Peter Prior-Sankey said in a statement: 'Everyone at Ridlers is truly devastated by yesterday's tragic incident and our thoughts and prayers remain with the pupils, their families, and the school. 'Our thanks go to the incredible emergency service teams for their response, and to those across our local hospitals and community who have done so much for those impacted over the last 24 hours. 'I can confirm that the driver is himself in a stable condition in hospital, but with a number of injuries. We are in contact with his wife and family, and have offered ongoing support.' He added that staff at the company are being supported and he and his team are liaising with Somerset Council. Mr Prior-Sankey said a decision had been made not to run any school routes into Minehead today, and that ongoing discussions will be had over the coming days concerning any other affected routes or contracts. An eyewitness said the coach had gone off a steep slope by the A396 Cutcombe Hill between Wheddon Cross and Timberscombe. The resident, who asked not to be named, said: 'The coach has gone down the slope. It's pretty steep around here and it's a big coach. 'There are no barriers along there or anything. We're used to it, you don't even notice it. 'I can't believe it happened quite honestly, it's the biggest thing I have known to go over the slope. 'It's horrendous, and I'm just so sorry for all those kids on that coach.' Mr Ellis from the fire brigade said: 'We were mobilised to a major incident of a coach that had overturned onto its roof and slid approximately 20ft down the embankment. 'Our crews carried out a number of extrications and rescues in extremely difficult circumstances, and they also supported our ambulance colleagues with casualty treatment. 'This was a very complex and technically difficult incident for our crews to deal with, and I'm grateful for the tireless effort and actions of the crews in doing everything they could for those who were trapped and as quickly as safely as possible.' Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said there were 'no adequate words to acknowledge the death of a child'. 'A heartbreaking update on the school bus crash in Somerset,' he wrote on X. 'There are no adequate words to acknowledge the death of a child. 'All my thoughts are with their parents, family and friends, and all those affected. 'Thank you to the emergency workers who are responding at pace - I'm being kept up to date on this situation.' The update on Thursday evening came after the force confirmed there had been a 'number of casualties' and declared a major incident. Police said the majority of the passengers had been safely taken off the bus and transported to a nearby rest centre. Others were left trapped on the bus and had to be rescued by fire crews and paramedics. One of the air ambulances that attended was seen landing at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, which is home to the West's major trauma centres, BBC News reported. Avon and Somerset Police said: 'A major incident has been declared as emergency services work together to respond to a collision involving a coach on the A396 this afternoon. 'We understand the coach was carrying approximately 60-70 people and was heading to Minehead Middle School at the time. 'We can confirm a number of casualties have been conveyed to hospital. 'The large majority of passengers have been taken to a rest centre in Wheddon Cross and we are working with the school to help them return at the earliest opportunity. 'Officers are at the school to help with that process, and we would ask any parents to please head there. 'The road remains closed. We'd please ask people avoid the area so emergency services' response to this incident is not impacted.' Minehead Middle School caters for pupils aged between nine and 14, and is five days away from the end of term. A spokesperson for Beacon Education MAT - the trust that the school is part of - said it was supporting families and staff at this 'very difficult time'. They added: 'We will update our school community further as soon as more information becomes available, and we kindly ask for your patience and understanding as we manage this evolving situation with care and sensitivity.' Peter Prior-Sankey, director of Ridlers, said: 'We were made aware of an incident involving one of our 70-seater vehicles at about 3.15pm this afternoon, understood to have taken place as a group of school pupils were returning from a daytrip. 'We have since been liaising with both the school, and the emergency services, while we try to understand the extent of the incident. 'Everyone within the Ridlers team is of course deeply concerned and anxious to find out more detail - particularly concerning the welfare of the driver and passengers. 'While we wait for further information from police and other emergency teams, our hearts of course go out to the school pupils and to our driver. 'We will be doing everything possible to understand what has happened.' South West Ambulance Service said: 'Along with other emergency services, we're attending a road traffic collision involving a coach near Minehead. 'People travelling in the area are advised to avoid the A396 between Wheddon Cross and Dunster and find an alternative route.' Rachel Gilmour, MP for Tiverton and Minehead, said the fatal school coach crash in Minehead was 'tragic' and she is 'heartbroken for the parents and the school and the wider family'. She told BBC Breakfast the coach was coming from Exmoor Zoo, when it came off the road and went down a 20ft slope, adding that it was 'pretty catastrophic'. Asked about the area, Ms Gilmour said: 'It's a very difficult road, very, very steep, very windy, and it's just the nature of rural roads in my constituency, you know, Minehead famously, only has one road that takes you into it on the A39 and if you're coming from where I live in Bampton or across the Moor, those are the roads that you have to use.' Ms Gilmour praised the 'fabulous job' the emergency services did, adding: 'We've been told up to 20 ambulances went to the scene, three air ambulances, obviously paramedics, police, firemen, you know, just deeply grateful to our emergency services and just heartbroken for the parents and the school and the wider family.' She said she visited Minehead Middle School recently and it is a 'fantastic school' with a 'great headmistress'.