The Auckland Westpac Rescue Helicopter attended the accident on August 30. Photo / Auckland Westpac Rescue Helicopter
A woman who helped save a man pinned under a quad bike, before later attending the funeral of a toddler, has spoken of a day of "huge trauma".
Leigh Mason says finding William (Bill) Blundell trapped was hard to forget and she is urging people in rural communities to stay on top of basic first aid training and for motorists to keep first aid kits in their cars.
He had six broken ribs, a broken collar bone, a broken elbow and large grazes.
The injuries still trouble him today.
Shaken by what happened Mason turned down help from the emergency services staff at scene but much later on would learn she had suffered a compression fracture in her back.
She instead went along to the funeral as planned, after cleaning most of the blood off.
Mason said her life had "changed dramatically" and she had just returned to work as an administrator last week.
She did not regret stepping in to help but urged others to be prepared, she said.
"You do what you have to do when you think somebody is dying."
After the accident the Blundell family had sent her a gift box, thanking her for what she had done and they likely would not have known she had injured herself, she said.
In a rural community, when it could take half an hour for the first response to arrive, people really need to know first aid and need to be carrying a first aid kit in the car, she said.
"That is one thing I learnt from it."
The Auckland Westpac Rescue Helicopter has attended 29 farm-related missions this year up to November 19, including one tractor roll.