Poppy seller turns mobility scooter into a military tank ahead of Remembrance Sunday
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
A patriotic poppy seller has transformed his mobility scooter into a TANK ahead of Remembrance Sunday - complete with tracks, a gun and mini rockets.
Eddie Wadsworth, 85, spent "many hours" creating his own version of an armoured vehicle out of disused cardboard boxes and other recycled materials.
The grandfather-of-two has even added military music to the tank as he drives around his home town raising funds for the Royal British Legion.
Eddie also painted the wooden-framed vehicle in camouflage green and brown and it comes complete with a turret and working doors, costing just £7 in total to make.
Eddie, of Swadlincote, Derbys., said: “The reaction to my tank has been incredible.
“I was a bit reluctant at first to go out in it. I was a bit unsure of the reaction I would get but people have really liked it, which has been brilliant.
“I have been surprised by the number of young people who are interested and have bought poppies and got involved.
"I didn't think the younger people were still following it. I'm pleased its been able to help people take an interest in Remembrance Sunday."
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
His father, John, was killed in action during World War Two in 1944. He lost his life aged 34 at the Battle of Anzio, where there were more than 40,000 Allied casualties.
He added: “I can vaguely remember my Dad. I never had a lot of contact with him because he had been in the army from 1939 to 1944. I was only a toddler when he left.
“I'm really repaying the Royal British Legion in the best ways I can. I remember my mother was in a right state with her losing her husband that young.
“The Legion used to the look after the children whose fathers had been killed and I think probably also any others that were in the services, not just the orphans.
“Every year at Christmas there used to be a big party and trips out to the seaside and stuff like that. I think there is a bit of that missing now in the services.”
Eddie has been volunteering with the charity for the last seven years and says he always tries to do something different for them each year. .
He added: “Four or five years ago I made quite a big memorial with all the names of the local Swadlincote people who had lost their lives in the World Wars.
“They have got various plaques up in the library that I have made over the years. I've got stuff all the over the place to be honest.
“I don't know what gave me the idea for the tank though. The thing is, I'm always making something and it's just one of those things that has developed.
“Now it's done I hope it commemorates my father’s death and all the others who died in wars.
“I was a carpenter until I retired, then I moved into my flat. Obviously, I can't use woodworking tools in a flat, such as saws and drills.
“My neighbours wouldn't care for it and they don't much like me playing my trumpet now anyway.”
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
Image by: Adam Hughes SWNS
The tank is made out of recycled cardboard boxes, which Mr Wardsworth got from local shop Forever Mobility which is in Swadlincote town centre.
Eddie has also managing to waterproof the cardboard for the wet winter months ahead by covering it in plastic.
He said: “I started making things with cardboard simply because it is a good substitute material for wood.
“I covered it with the clear sticky back plastic to try and waterproof it. It was all recyclable stuff anyway.
“That plastic covering was the only cost, so it only cost me £7 altogether. To be quite honest, that's where the skill is in the whole project.
“You have to get the wrinkles out when applying it and make sure it is even all the way around. I made a good job of that because everyone I speak to thinks it is metal.
“I was thinking this morning, what could I do with it when I have finished this? What could I do next? I’ve always got to be doing something.
“It is a flat pack, basically. It all breaks down to small pieces. I call it my Ikea Tank.
“Forever Mobility have been good enough to store it for me because I can't store it here in my flat.
“I got all the cardboard from the shop because they have a lot of scooters coming from abroad and the cardboard is really good quality."
Lee Sherratt, 36, owner of Forever Mobility, said the tank is ‘absolutely marvellous’ and many hours have gone into its creation.
He added: “Eddie has spent so much time on it. We have saved him good bits of cardboard.
"He told us he has spent hours and hours on it, but he is so modest.
“The attention to detail is just brilliant, even the doors open. He’s thought of everything right down to how to actually be able to fix it onto the buggy.
"‘He takes it so seriously, even down to wearing a helmet."
Mr Wadsworth, who lost his wife Shirley in 2011, would have celebrated 60 years of marriage this year.
He will be out visiting shops and businesses ahead of Remembrance Sunday, hoping to raise as much money as he can for the Royal British Legion.
The Poppy Appeal has 40,000 volunteer collectors and sees more than 40 million paper poppies distributed each year.
Video by: Ashley Moran
An exotic bird known as a rhea which fled his farm in the summer has been literally “driven home for Christmas” - like the Chris Rea classic
Image by: Grantham Journal
An exotic rhea bird on the run for months has showed up at Christmas - 'driven home' just like the Chris Rea classic song.
Inca the rhea fled from Ridgeview Farm near Belmesthorpe, Lincs., in July after reportedly being spooked by the noise of farm machinery.
His owner Rufus Shoon has had several reports of him being spotted since then but finally managed to capture the bird on December 23 - two days before Christmas.
Inca was last seen near to home only a week before he was captured but managed to escape.
He was finally caught after being spotted near Uffington Riding Stables, near Stamford, Lincs.
Inca has been re-united with his brother Aztec since returning home.
Image by: Grantham Journal
Image by: Grantham Journal
Mr Shoon said: “I was hoping he would come home safely. You just pray for a miracle.
“He needs some food but at least we got him home for Christmas.
“I gave him some bread and managed to coax him through a gate so I could pick him up and load him into the truck.
“He usually grazes on insects and greenery so in the Summer months he would have had plenty to survive on and would have been happy to be out, but in the last few weeks there has been a lot of rain and not much growing so it looks like he was hungry.
“Hopefully he has had enough wandering now and won’t disappear again.”
Rheas are often mistaken for emus, but the species comes from South America rather than Australia.
They are not usually thought to be dangerous but can reach speeds of 30mph which is why Inca has proved to be difficult to catch when he had been seen.
Sightings of Inca were reported several times in the media during his break from the farm.
SLEEPING ON THE JOB - A pair of nurses were sacked after they were caught sleeping while working on a ward for suicidal patients at a mental health trust
Image by: Matthew Newby SWNS
A pair of nurses were caught sleeping while working on a ward for suicidal patients at a mental health trust.
Christopher Smith, 32, discovered the two women sleeping on the job just hours after he had nearly taken his own life.
Mourning the loss of his grandmother and a stillborn child, he was talked down from a bridge by passers-by and police, and taken to the crisis wing at Priority House in Maidstone - which cares for people at the highest risk of suicide.
Mr Smith, who has been diagnosed with personality disorder, said: “When you’re in that moment of crisis and you can’t remember why you’re there, you just need to speak to someone.
“I’d been brought in the night before and woke up around 4am. I still really needed to talk to someone as I couldn’t stop thinking about hurting myself.
"I tapped on a door but got no answer, so I tried again. Then I peeked around a window and saw them sleeping. I thought no way, I couldn't believe it.
"I felt even more frustrated that these two ladies were actually being paid to sleep, there's people crying out for these jobs who could be helping others who are in a crisis."
The nursing office where the pair were sleeping, on October 13, during their overnight shift, is reportedly not covered by CCTV cameras.
Staff at Priority House get a one-hour break and have a separate break room where they can relax. Some may want to sleep here during their eleven hour overnight shift.
Image by: Matthew Newby SWNS
Image by: Matthew Newby SWNS
Image by: Matthew Newby SWNS
Mr Smith made an official complaint to the Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust (KPMT), which is responsible for Priority House.
It has since distanced itself from both workers, saying it will not work with them again.
A KPMT spokesman said: "We are grateful to the person who quite rightly raised this concern with us.
"As soon as it was brought to our attention, we carried out an investigation and found those concerned were employed through an agency and NHS Professionals and were not permanent staff of KMPT.
"This type of behaviour is not what we expect from anyone providing care to our patients and they will not work with us again.
“Both employing organisations have been asked to carry out their own investigations."
NHS Professionals, an organisation that provides temporary staff to NHS trusts, released the following response: "NHS Professionals is carrying out an immediate investigation into this issue.
"We are working with KMPT to understand the circumstances of the incident. The worker has been excluded from working any further shifts through NHS Professionals.”
A black man has alerted police after he was the victim of a racist attack when a Wetherspoon's customer used its app to send a BANANA to his table
Image by: Mark D'Arcy-Smith
A black man has alerted police after a Wetherspoon's customer used its app to send a BANANA to his table.
Mark D'arcy-Smith was sat in The Richmal Crompton in Bromley in Kent with a friend when a waiter delivered the appalling order.
Bananas can be ordered for 30p on the pub chain's app and sent to any table in any Wetherspoon.
Shocked Mark, 24, soon left the pub saying staff didn't treat the incident seriously and has since contacted the police.
He now wants to speak out to raise awareness as he said the unpleasant incident left him feeling unwanted - in a place he'd previously felt at home.
He said: "It made me feel confused, angry, lost and lonely. It was really overwhelming. All these emotions came in a matter of seconds.
"I don't feel like many people understand what it feels like to be racially abused. The staff didn't take it seriously."
Mark had arrived in the pub with his friend at around 8:30pm on November 8 - a usual trip on a Friday.
The pair sat down and enjoyed a few drinks before the abhorrent order arrived at around 10:05pm.
Wetherspoon allows its customers to order food and drinks to tables using numbers on an app - meaning you can send items anywhere unidentified.
He said: "We both looked at each other then looked at the banana. It clicked that it wasn't ours. It was clearly sent by someone who was trying to be racist.
"My friend went to talk to a staff member but they didn't see what the issue was. He said: 'do you know what's wrong here?'.
"They thought they had brought an incorrect order. We had to explain what was wrong with that.
"I was sat on my own at this point. I looked around to see if I could spot anyone. I got anxious. I think someone sent it because it was anonymous.
"Two girls came over and asked if I was okay, if I was going to stay."
Gutted Mark says his pal then went up to a worker at the chain pub to complain - who claimed they didn't see what the issue was.
But Mark asked his friend if they could leave when he returned from talking to workers and the pair walked out.
Image by: Mark D'Arcy-Smith
Image by: Mark D'Arcy-Smith
He said he returned to the pub the day after to complain again and ask what was being done but was met with a similar response - so then went to the police.
But even the memory of the horrible incident now gives Mark a bad feeling in a town he's lived in for many years.
He said: "When I walked past [the other day] I had this weird moment. My hands were shaking and my palms were sweating. I don't think I was very comfortable.
"I had hoped they [Wetherspoon] would take the situation seriously. They just treated it like other incidents - like a bar fight."
Football fan Mark added that he thinks a rise in racism in the beautiful game is fuelling the behaviour away from the stands.
A Wetherspoon spokesman said: "We apologise to the customer and appreciate the distress caused. This is now a police matter.
“We have responded to the customer and pointed out that the pub cannot be held responsible for app orders.”
A Wetherspoon spokesman said: “We apologise to the customer and appreciate the distress caused.
“This is now a police matter. We have responded to the customer and pointed out that the pub cannot be held responsible for app orders.”
A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police said: "Police are investigating a racially aggravated public order offence.
''The offence happened at about 22:05hrs on Friday, 8 November at a Westmoreland Place, Bromley and involves an item being sent to the victim’s table.
"The matter was reported to police the next day. Officers from the South Area Command Unit investigated.
"No arrests. Enquiries continue."
NINE LIVES - A woman was left fighting for life in a coma after contracting a deadly flesh-eating bug - from a CAT SCRATCH
Image by: Shirley Hair
A woman was left fighting for her life in a coma after contracting a deadly flesh-eating bug - from a CAT SCRATCH.
Shirley Hair, 65, almost died after her 'spiteful' Siamese cat, Chan, scratched her hand and the wound became infected.
Grandmother-of-five Shirley initially put her symptoms down to a bad bout of flu as she also felt dizzy, had no appetite, was confused and her muscles ached.
But Shirley was rushed to Southmead Hospital, Bristol, when the inflamed gash on her knuckle turned bright red and spread from her hand up her arm.
She was diagnosed with sepsis, septic shock, organ failure, pneumonia and Necrotizing fasciitis (NF) - a flesh-eating disease which results in the death of parts of the body's soft tissue and which can prove fatal.
Medics performed emergency surgery to remove the infected tissue from her hand before Shirley was placed in a medically-induced coma - to allow her body to rest whilst she recovered.
Shirley spent five days in a coma, more than six weeks in hospital and underwent a series of operations and skin grafts.
Now back at home in Winterbourne, Bristol, Shirley, has re-homed her £400 pedigree cat, Chan.
Image by: Jake McPherson
Image by: Shirley Hair
Image by: Shirley Hair
Shirley, a retired carer, who lives with her husband, Bob, 69, a former betting shop manager, said: "'That cat had always been spiteful, he was very expensive though!
''The day he scratched me I'd been gardening, I tried to pick him up for a cuddle but he wasn't having it.
''The scratch was quite deep, but I didn't think much of it until I started to get flu-like symptoms and totally lost my appetite.
''A doctor came out to see me and prescribed antibiotics, but after a few days I was feeling worse than ever.
''Then my arm began to get red and started swelling up really fast. It was scary. I was rushed into hospital and I was terrified as by that point I'd realised this was something very serious.
''The medics were amazing, but even after the emergency surgery to remove the tissue, I just carried on deteriorating. I felt like I was going to die. I couldn't believe this could all happen from a simple scratch.''
Shirley bought Chan from a breeder in Frampton Cotterell, South Gloucestershire, in July, 2016, when she spotted an ad on Gumtree.
She brought him home as a 10-week-old kitten and he quickly settled into their household, alongside their Labrador, Finn.
At first the moggie was quite nervous and didn't like being handled, but as he got older he became 'quite savage' - regularly lashing out at his owners.
Shirley said: "Bob and I went to view a litter of kittens and we instantly fell in love with Chan.
"He was adorable and we thought he'd be the perfect addition to our family.
"We'd had Siamese cats before and knew they can be a bit cantankerous, but thought with some love and affection he would be the perfect family pet.
"But as Chan got older he only got more aggressive - often leaving us with bites and scratches."
After her hospital admission in April 2018, Shirley's devastated family were told to 'expect the worst' by doctors who formally identified the cat scratch as the cause of her illness.
Image by: Shirley Hair
Image by: Shirley Hair
Image by: Jake McPherson
She was placed in an induced coma on 11th April until 15th when she began to come around.
The worried relatives, including her husband of 32 years, Bob, decided to keep a diary of her progress on the advice of intensive care nurses.
In one particularly poignant entry on 19th April, her daughter Rosie, 34, care home manager, from Bristol wrote: ''Mum you've had a difficult night your heart stopped beating but then restarted - we are all so worried.
''We know you are strong but also tired, we are willing your recovery. If love could fix you, you'd be home already.''
In another husband Bob writes: ''It's Friday , my brown eyed girl, and after a soggy chilly start the sun is beating down.We miss you at home. When I awake in the dark of night I feel you around and then you are gone and I realise what has been happening.''
After a series of procedures, Shirley continued to deteriorate and she suffered two heart attacks after another operation to remove the infection on Wednesday 18th April 2018.
Medics were then forced to sedate and ventilate her in order to stabilise her condition.
She was kept in ICU for almost a month before she began to show signs of improvement.
Shirley explained: ''After coming out of the coma I was severely paranoid due to the combination of infection and medication. I became convinced that I was responsible for the whole thing.
''My son, James, told me that the cat did it but I didn't believe him, I thought they were all covering for me. It was so distressing.
''On top of that I'd been having dreadful nightmares - I was convinced I was in a video game, running from monsters. It was absolutely horrific.''
To combat Shirley's anxiety her loving family, including children, Zoe, 46, Jessica, 40, James, 38, and Rosie, 34, kept her calm by spending hours by her bedside.
Desperate to help her relax they tried talking and playing relaxing music, as the agitation was making her heart rate dangerously high.
Once she was well enough, doctors performed a skin graft from the top of her leg in order to cover the 'gaping wound' on her arm - which was so deep her tendons were exposed.
A vac pump - a machine which decreases air pressure on the wound - was fitted in order to help the skin tissue grow and she was given multiple physiotherapy sessions to regain movement.
After over eight operations and over two months in hospital the plucky gran is now home and well- with her hand 'almost as good as it was'.
She said: ''I can't thank my family and the NHS enough for getting me back to almost full health.
''It's really been quite an ordeal, but they've all supported me 100% every single step of the way.
''My memory isn't as good as it was, I can be quite absent minded nowadays and I'm definitely not as sharp as I was before I got ill. But I'm here and that's all that matters.
''I went back to visit the amazing nurses in ICU and they were speechless to see me looking so well.
''They said to me 'not everyone comes out of here as perky as you Shirley' and that's when it really hit home how lucky I am to be alive. Some people must not come out at all.
''I've even read through all the diary entries my family wrote, I can't get through them without weeping. The depth of love they have for me is just staggering.
''I feel like the luckiest woman alive! After all that happened I decided I really couldn't face Chan the cat anymore so my daughter Zoe volunteered to have him.
''She popped him in a basket and took him home to Wales on the train. She loves animals and isn't really fazed by much at all.
''Our lovely golden Labrador Finn is glad to see the back of Chan too, after having his ears bitten constantly, he can relax now.''
TIMELINE:
April 8th - Cat scratched her
April 11th- Admitted to hospital, placed in induced coma
April 12th- diagnosed with necrosis/sepsis etc had emergency op to remove infection
April 15th- began waking from coma
April 18th- Operation to remove infection and had two cardiac arrests, sedated again
April 20th- woke from being sedated
April 26th- first skin graft on her hand
May 2nd- transferred to plastic surgery ward
May 3rd- realised skin graft hadn't taken
May 7th - another unsuccessful attempt made to skin graft
May 18th- SENT HOME
May 29th- outpatient, back at the hospital for a vac pump to be fitted, no attempt at skin graft
July 21st- 3rd skin graft attempted, was successful!
Video by: Gabriella Petty
Where have you FIN all my life- Meet the worlds friendliest dolphin who has made best friends for life in both humans and dogs!!
Image by: Adam Harnett
Meet Jojo - the world's friendliest wild dolphin who has made best friends for life with both humans and dogs!!
Atlantic bottle-nosed dolphin Jojo, who lives in the waters of Turks & Caicos, has a rare personality and actively seeks out human interaction.
He will chase his human friends at 'Wake to Wake Watersports' as they whizz past on their surfboards and speedboats - or enjoy a gentle swim with his 'best friend' - eight-year-old cocker spaniel Zyzz.
The heart-warming footage of the playful dolphin was provided by Wake to Wake Watersports, who operate out of Jojo’s home of Turks & Caicos.
Image by: Adam Harnett
Image by: Adam Harnett
Image by: Adam Harnett
Image by: Adam Harnett
Mark De Fraine, on behalf of Wake To Wake, said: "We feel extremely lucky as Jojo seems to love our boat as much as we do!
"We often stop when we see him and he will swim over and look at the bottom of the boat.
“There is a tracking fin on the underside which resembles a dorsal fin and we have found that Jojo seems to really enjoy examining it.
“When we start moving and we kick up a good surfing wave Jojo jumps right in and loves to surf with us!
"On many occasions we bump into him as we are heading out onto the water and he will join in for the ride, or just wants to hang out.
“Jojo has spent time surfing, swimming and even Subwinging with our guests - it’s always an unforgettable experience!”
To keep up to date with all of JoJo's amazing adventures follow @waketowaketc on Instagram
Video by: Gabriella Petty
'TIL DEATH DO US BARK - A pair of pooches were taken on a special walk - down the aisle for their own WEDDING
Image by: Len Copland
An adorable pair of pooches were taken on a special walk - down the aisle for their own WEDDING.
Black retriever Fiji and golden retriever Dotty tied the knot in front of around 50 guests
in a marquee outside a pub.
The bash at the Prince of Wales pub, Stoke-sub-Hamdon, Somerset, had all the trappings of a human ceremony.
It included a specially-made dog-friendly cake, a dress and a guitarist to play the couple in.
The dogs walked down the aisle to 'All You Need is Love' by The Beatles and left to 'It Must Be Love' by Madness.
Pippa Hamilton, 60, who officiated the ceremony, said the doggy duo were "slightly all over the place".
Image by: Len Copland
Image by: Len Copland
Image by: Len Copland
Image by: Len Copland
She said: "My job is a celebrant and this idea of a dog wedding came up. I was hesitant to start with - in no way did I want to want to devalue what I do for couples.
"It was an unusual thing. I had never done anything like it before!
"But it highlights the need for love in everybody's lives. When you have love in your life your tail wags!
"The dogs were slightly all over the place, but the bride looked lovely. It was a wonderful thing to do. Apparently they are inseparable."
Pippa often officiates 'handfasting' ceremonies, a rural custom where you bind the newlywed's hands together with a ribbon to show unity.
She added: "I couldn't do that with the dogs yesterday, so I tied their leads together."
The event was organised by Amanda Reed, from Saville Row Hounds, a bespoke dog clothing shop.
Amanda, 59, said: "They retrievers won a competition. We chose them because they were so beautiful.
"The dogs have been friends for a long time and the owners thought it was ideal.
"I made a wedding coat for the female with flowers around her neck. The groom had a bow tie on.
"It was all done in a beautiful gazebo with chairs [for the guests] - someone played the guitar too."
WHAT A BALLS OP - A dad has waived his anonymity and spoken out as hospital bosses admitted a series of failings in a damning report after an op that led him to lose a TESTICLE
Image by: Newsquest The Mail Cumbria
A dad has waived his anonymity and spoken out as hospital bosses admitted a series of failings in a damning report after an op that led him to lose a TESTICLE.
Bill Murray, 62, underwent a routine procedure at Furness General Hospital, Cumbria, in April to remove swelling from his scrotum.
The supposedly simple operation to drain the swollen testicle was carried out by consultant urologist Ashutosh Jain.
But, after the op, the dad-of-two woke up to find a vacuum drain had been inserted and left underneath the skin.
Bill said this was not checked or emptied for 24 hours.
Just two days later, in excruciating pain with the swelling having grown and his testicle now black and gangrenous, Bill, from Walney Island, asked to see a doctor and he was rushed back into theatre by a different surgeon.
When he woke up, he was shocked to see his right testicle was missing - as he claims he hadn't been told exactly what he was going back into theatre for.
The procedure, known as a hydrocele repair, typically takes around 30 minutes and rarely results in complications.
Although patients can usually go home on the same day as a hydrocele repair op, Bill had to stay in hospital for 12 days.
His first operation was carried out by under-fire consultant urologist Ashutosh Jain who has been responsible for other errors leading to patient harm and in two cases contributed to patient deaths.
Two other consultant urologists at the hospital - Kavinder Madhra and Muhammad Naseem - have also been responsible for errors over the last 18 years.
Mr Madhra resigned in October 2018 while Mr Naseem remains at the trust where he is clinical lead of the urology department.
It was only when Bill complained that the University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust launched an investigation and has this week handed him a damning Root Cause Analysis.
Image by: Newsquest The Mail Cumbria
The report reveals:
The serious incident by the second surgeon who discovered Bill's testicle was gangrenous.
There was a missed opportunity to do a bladder scan when Bill complained of pain and an inability to urinate.
He was not advised of the risks of the operation.
Policy wasn't followed in escalating Bill to the medical team when he began experiencing pain and other complications.
Finally, medical records from doctors’ assessments and ward rounds have since ‘gone missing’.
To Bill's further ‘disgust’ he has discovered the investigation was led by Mr Naseem.
He said: “I can’t believe they would allow one of the other highly-criticised urologists to be involved in the investigation into what happened to me.
“I’m absolutely disgusted. I hold the surgeon Mr Jain fully responsible for all this.”
UHMBT medical director Dr Shahedal Bari said: “We are very sorry for the distress the patient suffered, and for the length of time it has taken to complete this investigation.
“We have shared our findings with the patient and will remain in touch with him. We would be happy to meet the patient to discuss any concerns.
“An investigation like this involves committees chaired by UHMBT executives and our governance team who are not related to the clinical care.
"This process is governed by trust policies aligned with national guidelines.
"To ensure impartial discussion senior clinicians (Doctors, Nurses) and managers outside the departments are involved in checking (as a standard practice for any RCA).
“The process is not completed yet as an external review will be considered and team lessons will be discussed, in particular around improving record keeping and not missing opportunities to scan patients in this situation.”
BULL DOZER - Couple woke up to find a BULL had wandered into their garden - ramming their bin & pooing on the patio before laying down for a snooze
Image by: Joshua Bambridge
A couple woke up to find a massive BULL had wandered into their garden - ramming their bin, pooing on the patio then laying down and sleeping for an hour.
The bovine - weighing nearly a tonne - smashed through the garden fence from its adjoining field.
The weighty animal trampled all over the lawn, headbutted the wheelie bin, left "hoof shaped pot holes" on the grass and splattered poo over the patio.
The beast - named Arnold after US actor Arnold Schwarzenegger - eventually decided to lay down for a nap.
It left the homeowners, from Raunds, Northamptonshire, enough time to call the farmer and for him to be taken away.
The homeowner said: "I had just gone downstairs to make a hot drink.
"I looked out of the kitchen window and I just couldn't believe my eyes.
"My first thought was 'F*** Arnold's in the garden.
Image by: Joshua Bambridge
Image by: Joshua Bambridge
Image by: Joshua Bambridge
Image by: Joshua Bambridge
"I called my fiancée over and she told me to 'Shut up' because we had joked about it before.
"She was petrified. It was a moment of panic.
"I didn't think it was wise to go outside it as it was probably really distressed.
"I managed to get through to the farmer and he was 40 minutes away.
"So we just sat and watched as he tore up the garden basically.
"I had been doing up the garden over the summer but he's completely ruined my turf!
"There are hoof marks on the lawn now that look like pot holes.
"We've decided to call him Arnold because he's really big built just like Arnold Schwarzenegger.
"As soon as the farmer arrived he calmed down a bit as he seemed pretty familiar with him.
"We've been living here 18 months and have seen the odd sheep outside the house.
"But needless to say, we've never had a surprise like that on a weekend."
A gym addict was given the all-clear from pelvic cancer from the NHS despite having secondary tumours in her spine - that were found when she had a PRIVATE scan
Image by: Dan Rowlands SWNS
A gym addict told she was cancer-free by NHS doctors was stunned to find she was riddled with secondary tumours just a month later when she had a private MRI scan.
Super-fit Gemma Sisson, 38, says medics MISSED the tumours in a three separate scans taken in the seven months AFTER she was given the all-clear.
Her last NHS scan, which revealed no cancer, was taken just a month before her private one.
Now Gemma, who has been told she is terminally ill, is calling for better NHS screening for all cancer sufferers.
Her ordeal began in the summer of 2017 when a lump she discovered in her groin was diagnosed in March 2018 as pelvic cancer.
After chemotherapy sessions at the Leeds Cancer Centre, attached to St James's University Hospital, she was given the all-clear in January this year.
A final series of scans were taken and in July it was confirmed she was cancer-free.
But shockingly, after complaining to a physiotherapist about pain in her neck and back she had suffered since March this year she was advised to pay £330 for a private MRI scan.
To her horror it revealed that she had secondary tumours in her neck, back, liver and stomach.
Gemma said: "Obviously I wasn't all-clear.
"I had a final, bigger CT scan from the NHS in July to check the cancer had gone.
"They missed small tumours that had developed in my stomach and they did not scan far up enough to spot the cancer at the top of my spine - they missed it by millimetres."
Gemma has now started a petition calling for thorough checks for the life-threatening illness before patients are told they are cancer-free.
It has so far attracted almost 50,000 signatures with many contributors telling their own horror stories of how they did not find other cancers until it was too late.
Gemma, who now has a collapsed spine, feels lucky to have at least found her secondary cancer before she became completely paralysed, but feels it could have been detected earlier.
Her diagnosis came after a private physiotherapist she was seeing for chronic back and neck pain told her she ought to have a scan as what she was suffering was not normal.
The scan she paid £330 for in August - just one month after her last NHS scan - revealed cancer in her spine had eaten away at two and a half vertebrae.
Image by: Dan Rowlands SWNS
Image by: Simon Galloway
Image by: Simon Galloway
Image by: Dan Rowlands SWNS
Image by: Dan Rowlands SWNS
The scan showed the tumours growing on her spine, liver and her stomach, and Gemma was dealt the heartbreaking blow that they were secondary cancer and incurable.
Project manager Gemma said: "I was given the all-clear in January and was having three monthly scans after that.
"At my last scan in July they decided I could now switch to yearly scans.
"I dread to think how bad I would have become waiting another year for a scan."
About her neck and back pain, Gemma said: "I never connected the two.
"I was going to my GP and was getting very strong pain killers but it did not enter my head that it could be anything to do with cancer.
"Unfortunately, nobody else - including a chiropractor and medics at Leeds General Infirmary (LGI) A&E - made the connection either or even looked any further to investigate my back pain.
"When I went for private physio care, the pyshiotherapist told me straight away that I ought to go for a scan on my neck to see what was going on - the pain was so severe I had to pick my own head up to get up in the morning.
"He had worked at the LGI in the spinal injuries unit for several years, and he literally saved my life and stopped me being paralysed."
Gemma underwent major surgery at the LGI on her spine, which took seven hours, during which they removed the tumours and collapsed vertebrae and relieved pressure on her spinal cord.
At this stage doctors are unable to give Gemma a prognosis, but it is uncurable.
Gemma will undergo chemotherapy every three weeks from now until the cancer ultimately takes her life.
So far the pain has improved but she has good and bad days.
At the moment her only form of exercise is to go out for walks.
Gemma said: "I am very fit and healthy, I eat well and exercise, I've never smoked and don't drink to excess, sadly I think this possibly went against me as I was ill.
"Even I didn't think this could happen to me."
Gemma, who lives in Leeds, but comes from Bridlington, East Yorks., is now hoping to make a difference to others and show how important it is to have better investigation - and possibly full-body scans - before giving the all-clear.
While she campaigns she is also trying to make the most of her life.
She has got back together with her ex, gym owner Ricky Moore, 39, who she dated for 14 years before breaking up in December 2017.
Gemma's friends Rachael Harrison and Sarah Brown started up a GoFundMe page to raise funds for her to cover rent and day-to-day expenses - and tick off some activities on her bucket list - now she is no longer able to work, which has already raised almost £15,000.
To donate to Gemma's page, visit https://www.gofundme.com/f/fundraising-for-gemma.
To sign Gemma's petition go to: Change.org/fullbodycheck
Dr Yvette Oade, Chief Medical Officer at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust said:
“Full body scans are offered to cancer patients where it is appropriate and there is
clinical evidence to support this, in order to assess the patient’s response to
treatment.
"Unfortunately there is never a guarantee, even if there is no evidence of active
disease after treatment, that the cancer will not recur in another area of the body.”