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18 oyal ational Teignmouth RNLI Lifeboat The Two Annes


THE lifeboat tradition in Teignmouth goes back a long way. It begins in the days before the RNLI when a pulling and sailing lifeboat was stationed in the town by the Shipwrecked Fisherman’s and Mariners’ Royal Benevolent Society. That was in 1851.


The RNLI became a vital occupier of Teignmouth’s seafront in 1854 when the charity took over the local lifeboat. The rowing and sailing vessel was launched down the beach using skids – pieces of wood over which the lifeboat literally skidded. Volunteers, of whom the RNLI relied then and still do now, did it all from the launching to the crewing of the lifeboat.


● Teignmouth RNLI lifeboat The Two Annes


Now the Royal National Lifeboat Institution in Teignmouth operates the very latest in inshore lifeboat design – the Atlantic 85. The Two Annes and its volunteer crew of four is usually on the way to a distress call within three to four minutes of a launch request.


The newly designed Atlantic 85 lifeboat is fitted with a radar system, GPS and electronic chart plotting plus a radio direction finder. And it’s the engines that give the lifeboat some important ‘green’ credentials. The two


● Teignmouth RNLI lifeboat and lifeguards


engines are four-stroke 2 x 115hp Yamaha’s, which use less fuel and produce fewer emissions – this means less pollutants being released into the water and atmosphere. But these lifeboats don’t come cheap; in fact the price tag is around £160,000 which, to a charity like the RNLI, is a good deal of money The Teignmouth lifeboat is one of the busiest in the south west, and a fully coordinated RNLI beach lifeguarding and lifeboat service is provided along our part of the Devon coastline. The lifeboat averages 40 services and rescues more than 40 people each year, and in the first year of RNLI lifeguards patrolling the Teignmouth and Dawlish Warren beaches they attended more than 200 incidents and assisted over 230 people. Exercises take place the first Sunday morning and the third Thursday evening of every month, when visitors are welcome to see the lifeboat and talk to the crew.


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