TWO unlikely heroes came to the rescue of a Barrow tot who had become wedged in her bath seat.

Aimee Devlin and her 10-month-old daughter Minnie were enjoying the usual bath time routine when the tiny tot stood up and slipped into the leg hole of her bath seat.

Mrs Devlin said: “I came to bath Minnie and I’d put in an order for some takeaway beforehand.

“I thought I’d get her bathed and ready for bed and timed it so I could have the takeaway after she got put down - but it didn’t quite go to plan.”

Minnie was lying face first so Aimee had to pull both her and the bath seat out before she realised Minnie was ‘fully wedged in’.

Then came a knock at the door - Dylan Wood, a Just Eats driver who was out helping his dad Gav deliver for Uber Eats.

Mrs Devlin said: “I picked Minnie up in the bath seat and went to the door and said ‘please, please help me. My baby is stuck in her bath seat and I can’t get her out’.

“The lad tried to tug her and she just wasn’t budging and she was starting to get cold at this point because she was still wet.

“The lad mentioned his dad was with him and at that point his dad pulled up outside, wondering what was taking his son so long.”

After realising what was happening, the dad sprang into action.

“He suggested I get some washing up liquid or soap,” said Mrs Devlin.

“So I went to get some washing up liquid and squirted it on her lower half and that lubricated her up enough for us to get her out of the space that she was stuck in.

“He mentioned to me that he has four kids and that this was absolutely nothing.

“He was so calm and I was flapping - I didn’t know whether I needed to call the fire service to try and get her out.

“It was one of them awful situations where you find yourself alone - my husband is always around and the one night he chooses to go out is the night she gets stuck in her bath seat.

“They (the men) arrived in the nick of time.”

Despite the stress of the ordeal, baby Minnie was not upset, with mum Aimee saying that she was ‘just moaning at the inconvenience’.

She said: “I am truly thankful to them for stopping and helping me out because I really was panicked.

“They managed to get the baby free without causing any injury which potentially could have happened.

“They didn’t have to stop and I don’t know if it affected any of their other work.”

After the ordeal she gave them a tip for a job well done.