Joe Duffy admitted to enduring an excruciating weever fish sting recently on a beach in Dublin and says he hasn't entered the water without swim boots since.

The RTE Radio One presenter invited a woman on air to speak about her experience of being stung, after which he said the same had happened to him. These stings are becoming more and more common in Ireland as a major increase in sitings of the hidden fish is reported.

Before telling his story, Orla joined him on air and said: “Well I was at the beach and it was a lovely day in Spiddal and just coming out of the beach - just at the water’s edge - I felt a sharp pinch on my toe.

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“By the time I got back to where we were sitting I was limping and the toe was really really sore. It just progressively got worse and within about 10 minutes I was in agony, excruciating pain.

“I soon found out it was a weever fish. What happened was, I had to be carried off the beach because I couldn’t get up off it and as we did, two ladies came along as we were standing at the car loading up and they recognised what had happened.

“They told me it was a weever fish - which I had never heard of - so the reason I contacted you was to raise awareness of how to overcome this pain and how to calm the foot down because it was unbelievably sore.

“The solution is to put your foot into a bucket of very hot water.”

Joe Duffy then admitted “it happened to me and when I go into the sea now I always wear those little booty shoes.

He went on to describe it as a “little red dot” and said he thought it was “glass or something,” but then said the pain gradually moved up his leg which he also described as excruciating.

Duffy said a person passing by knew it was a weever sting and recommended he light a cigarette and place it on the sting.

However, a nurse chimed in then and said her advice would be “to immerse your foot in as hot water as you can endure.

According to WaterSafety.ie, when a bather steps on a weever fish, its spines embed into the human flesh, and discharge its poison.

Joe Duffy describes 'excrutiating pain' after being stung by weever fish
Joe Duffy describes 'excrutiating pain' after being stung by weever fishPhoto: Dusko Jaramaz/PIXSELL

The experts say the pain is at its most intense for an initial two hours when the foot normally goes red and swells up - then it may go numb until the following day with irritation and pain that can last for up to two weeks.

In rare cases, the spine can break off in the foot and will cause discomfort until it is removed.

Although the sting can be very painful, it will not cause permanent damage.

However, there is a danger for some people that it can cause anaphylactic shock or allergic reaction to those who are vulnerable.

The only death on record after someone being stung by a weever occurred as long ago as 1927 when an angler suffered multiple stings whilst fishing off Dungeness in the UK.

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