'Dracula's bride' donates 100th pint of blood

Carol is on the left, dressed in fancy-dress - she is wearing a mock white wedding dress with a thin white cloak, and is holding a dark purple rose up to her chest. On her right is her husband dressed in a black shirt with red bowtie and a black and red hood, wearing a latex mask of Dracula. In the background signage for the blood donor centre can be seen.
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Carol Verney said she has no plans to stop donating blood in the future

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An 80-year-old woman has donated her 100th pint of blood on Halloween while dressed as Dracula's bride.

Carol Verney, from Blandford in Dorset, said she invited passersby to donate as she made her way to the blood donor centre in fancy dress.

With her for support was her husband Malcolm, dressed appropriately as Dracula.

She said she has no plans to stop giving blood after this because of how much she enjoys the feeling of helping other people.

Carol, dressed in the same white fancy-dress as above, lying on a reclining blue chair in the blood donor centre. She is still holding the dark purple rose, and her right arm is laid out on the armrest and attached to medical equipment for taking blood.
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Carol said her husband Malcolm was a source of support over the years, reminding her to go out and donate blood

BBC Radio Solent's Steve Harris visited her on Friday at the NHS blood donor centre in a Boots shop in Poole where she made her milestone donation.

"I just can't believe I've got here," she said. "It's been such a fantastic journey and everyone's been so helpful, including my husband."

"Everybody was smiling as I walked down [to the donor centre] and I said, 'I'm giving my hundredth pint of blood, why don't you come and join me?"

She said that when she began giving blood, she didn't expect to have ended up giving 100 pints.

"I keep giving, and they keep taking, and we got to 100 - it's only taken 61 years, but hey," she said.

But now that she has reached that number, she said she has no plans to stop - but that she doubts she'll get to 200 pints.

"I might get to 102, that's about it," she joked.

She also encouraged others to try giving blood, and said she didn't find the process uncomfortable.

"We all need to give blood," she said. "You're helping somebody, you're giving life to somebody, they might need it - you might need it yourself," she said.

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