When Nathan Beasy pulled a woman from her burning car he says he was only doing what anyone else would have done.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
The Camperdown man, along with Cobden’s Demi Mounsey and Jancourt East’s Garry Finlayson, saved the woman from the wreck. They will be honoured for their bravery at a ceremony at Melbourne’s Government House on Wednesday when they receive bronze bravery medals from The Royal Humane Society of Australasia.
The horror Jancourt East crash happened right before Mr Beasy’s eyes on the Cobden-Lavers Hill Road in August, 2015.
The woman was driving towards him when she failed to negotiate a bend near Gribbles Road and ran into scrub.
“She only missed me by about a car length, I slammed on my brakes and saw it in the rear-vision mirror as she ran off the road,” Mr Beasy said.
The car eventually came to rest in a tangle of blackberries.
“I don’t know how she survived it,” Mr Beasy said.
“It was a mission just to get to her through the blackberries. I was hoping for the best and that she wasn’t gone. It was a pretty grim scene when I got there.”
He managed to wrench the door open and began talking to the woman, still not sure if she was alive or dead.
“There was blood everywhere. I eventually got a moan out of her. She was in a bad way.”
All the while, Mr Beasy was trying to call emergency services, but the calls couldn’t connect, so he headed back onto the road to flag down a passing vehicle.
More people arrived on the scene, including Ms Mounsey and Mr Finlayson.
By this time, the car had started smoking, and soon flames were coming up through the bonnet. The rescuers had been reluctant to move the woman, not knowing the extent of her injuries, but as the fire took hold it became a matter of life or death.
“In the end I said I wasn’t leaving her,” Mr Beasy said.
With the help of Ms Mounsey and Mr Finlayson, the woman was lifted free. This took two to three minutes, and by then the flames were inside the cabin.
The woman’s dog was also in the vehicle. It fled in fear but was found the next day.
Two years on, Mr Beasy remains a reluctant hero and was unsure at first whether he would attend the Melbourne ceremony.
“I was just doing what anyone else would do for you, or at least what you’d hope they’d do,” he said.
“But a few people have said that what I did was pretty cool.”