helen mulroy reports. it must have pushed things out of the way as it went through. this steel prong, known as a tine, used to be part ofjonathan willis' truck. the last time he saw it, it was protruding from his abdomen after he was impaled in a freak farming accident. the farmer from wisbech was unloading straw bales last december when the vehicle rolled into him. stunned wife wendy was alerted byjonathan's shouts from the yard. she called the ambulance. seeing somebody stand up there with quite a chunky spike coming right through their body, anybody would have said there is no way anybody could possibly survive this. and, unfortunately, that is how i felt. it was terrifying, it was really terrifying. emergency services, including the air ambulance, arrived within seven minutes. but it took an hour for the teams to cut the tine from the forklift, withjonathan awake and standing throughout. jonathan was then transferred to addenbrooke's hospital by road ambulance, with paramedics having to take the weight of the one stone tine throughout the hour—long journey. whe