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00:00 Jack Smedley from Minster has been a volunteer on the crew for seven years
00:05 and also works on the docks for Briggs Marine.
00:07 In terms of the R&LI on the Isle of Sheppey, I do think we're heavily restricted being in the port.
00:12 You know, where you've got fishing villages and towns and places all over the country
00:17 where that lifeboat station is the heart of that community.
00:20 I think sadly we're sort of restricted in that area.
00:23 Generally when the pager goes off, we're sort of instilled in you,
00:27 you're going to the worst moments in someone's life, hence why they've had to call 999 and get us there.
00:32 So I think that personal touch and that commitment is what makes it all the more special.
00:38 It's a service we're all familiar with and it's been going for 200 years,
00:42 but within that time do all members of the public actually grasp the concept
00:46 of what these people are doing day to day and the commitment they're putting in to save lives?
00:51 Well I'm here in Sheerness to find out a bit more about those people saving lives
00:56 and to find out what they do in their day jobs.
00:59 Rachel runs a microbrewery and has volunteered for seven years.
01:03 A requirement is R&LI volunteers have to live close to the station so they can respond quickly to calls.
01:10 My first memory of going out and thinking, 'Oh, this is for real',
01:15 is you go out at night when I was inexperienced and you're having to put all your trust in fellow crew members
01:21 and know that they know what they're doing and that was quite an eye-opener at times
01:26 when it's pitch black and you're trusting everybody on board.
01:31 But other than that, memorable ones, we had a job where we rescued some paramedics
01:37 and police officers one night, that was quite memorable.
01:40 Steve's been part of the Sheppy crew for six years.
01:43 I enjoy it. It's my way of putting something back into the community.
01:47 Plus it's a general interest because I sail anyway and what I learn with the R&LI I take back to sailing.
01:56 I get the advantage of seeing what causes most of the breakdowns on boats
02:01 and why we have to go out to boat so I just try and make sure that doesn't happen to me.
02:05 And they're recruiting new volunteers all the time.
02:08 Ricardo joined nine months ago.
02:11 Obviously where I got the office, got the office running in the background
02:15 where there's a lot of people, that's why I decided to join the R&LI.
02:18 I always had boats, I've always been in contact with the sea on a personal scale.
02:24 But obviously I had the opportunity to come up and I believe it was an event,
02:29 an open day they'd done it, so I went and came along and spoke with the crew
02:34 and everyone seemed really nice and yeah, I decided to join.
02:37 Looking back at the vast history of the R&LI and the thousands of lives saved
02:42 braving the elements on the county's harsh waters,
02:45 the volunteers and coxswains in Sheppey hope to see the legacy of the charity
02:50 sailing along in centuries to come.
02:53 Sophia Akin for KMTV on the Isle of Sheppey.