Scarborough vet paralysed in bull attack

A popular Scarborough vet who was left paralysed after being attacked by a bull he was treating will feature on a new TV show.
Chris Cundall was rushed to hospitalChris Cundall was rushed to hospital
Chris Cundall was rushed to hospital

Last year, Chris Cundall was called to a farm close to his Scarborough practice to look at a bull which was believed to be lame.

The 63-year-old went to examine the animal but it crushed him against one wall before spinning around and pounding him into the back wall of the enclosure.

Chris CundallChris Cundall
Chris Cundall
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Chris, a vet with 40 years' experience, suffered a spinal fracture which impinged on his spinal cord leaving him partially paralysed from the waist down.

“I don’t really remember the accident itself but, as I was on the ground waiting for the bull to come at me again, I do remember thinking well, this is probably it,” said Chris.

“I wasn’t frightened. I’ve had a very good life, but the animal never came at me again.”

His story is set to feature in a new series of Helicopter ER which starts on Monday.

The bull which crushed Chris against the wallThe bull which crushed Chris against the wall
The bull which crushed Chris against the wall
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Chris was airlifted to the James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, by Yorkshire Air Ambulance and his accident features in the first episode of a new series of Helicopter ER, the award-winning UKTV programme which follows the life-saving work of the rapid response emergency charity.

The accident, which happened a year ago, has left the popular vet in a wheelchair with an ‘incomplete’ paralysis.

Chris, whose wife Jill runs a livery yard at West Ayton, has ridden horses all his life and is a veteran point-to-point and amateur National Hunt rider having competed for 43 seasons.

He attends the state-of-the-art rehabilitation unit at Jack Berry House, run by the Injured Jockey Fund, twice a week, and is determined to walk again.

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“I do a lot of exercise and I can move my legs a little now and weight bear with just a little support,” added Chris, who has had to move out of the family’s Sherburn farm into a wheelchair accessible house.

“I try to read complete chapters of books standing up and, I don’t know whether I will improve any more, but my goal is to be able to walk properly with a Zimmer frame.

“It is obviously incredibly hard on me and my family but there are people who are much worse off than me and I’m definitely a glass half full kind of person.”

With a lot of true Yorkshire grit and determination Chris is planning to do a sponsored walk on a Zimmer frame – either at different racecourses or between the penultimate and last fence of one course to raise money for both Yorkshire Air Ambulance and the Injured Jockey Fund.

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He added: “The Injured Jockey Fund have been brilliant and having Jack Berry House just a few miles away has made such a difference.

“There is a definite time window for this kind of injury which is where the air ambulance comes into its own. Living where we do and being such keen horseriders we already knew just how important Yorkshire Air Ambulance is. It is a fantastic charity.”

The third series of Helicopter ER starts on Monday (July 23) at 9pm on UKTV’s real life channel Really. The first episode also features a young girl who suffers major facial injuries in a road accident and a helicopter landing on the 18th hole of a golf course to treat a player who suffers a heart attack.

Helicopter ER is made by York-based Air Television who have won two Royal Television Society awards for their work on the compelling series.

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Yorkshire Air Ambulance serves 5million people across Yorkshire and carries out over 1,300 missions every year. The charity operates two, state-of-the-art Airbus H145 helicopters and needs to raise £12,000 every day to keep saving lives.