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Volunteers pluck teen from ice floating down river

North River Fire Department. File photo

North River Fire Department. File photo

Published on March 17, 2013
Published on March 17, 2013
The Canadian Press  RSS Feed
Topics :
North River Fire Department , CORNWALL , North River

CORNWALL - A teenage boy was shaken and cold but unharmed after a piece of ice he jumped on broke off and began rapidly travelling down a river on Saturday afternoon.

Kirby Wakelin, chief of the North River Fire Department, said the teen boy and his friend were jumping on ice on the North River in Cornwall near the North River Causeway when a piece broke off.

Wakelin said one of the boys jumped into the water, but the other stayed on the icefloe.

“He did jump off and probably went up to his knees in the frigid water and then he ran into shore, but the other young fella got caught in the flow,” said Wakelin on Sunday from his home in Cornwall.

He said the river’s swift current quickly carried the teen downriver on the icefloe, measuring about two metres by three metres.

“It was going quite rapidly... probably (three or four kilometres an hour),” said Wakelin. “One of my guys was walking on shore with him and couldn’t keep up with him.”

Wakelin said three volunteer firefighters dressed in cold water survival suits were called in to rescue the boy in a zodiac boat.

He said the volunteers had some difficulties getting the zodiac through ice near the shore, but eventually reached the boy and brought him to safety.

Wakelin said the boy was treated by emergency paramedics at the scene.

“He was just scared and cold,” said Wakelin. “Kids today, they’ll do anything.”

Wakelin said he wanted to remind residents of the dangerous of playing on unsafe ice.

“It is very dangerous and these frigid water, it doesn’t take anything to become disoriented” he said.

Comments

  • Username
    TO BILL
    - March 18, 2013 at 18:36:41

    Yes, Bill, I agree with much of what you wrote, and besides all that, I think you know as well as I do that (whether you admit it or not) when we people leave God out of our life --even a little bit-- we are vulnerable as orphans, nobody to teach us anything good. When you exclaim, correctly, that "something is wrong", it is because we disobey God, our Father.

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  • Username
    Michael
    - March 18, 2013 at 14:00:02

    Pooch Cove, NL. It happens. Kids will experiment, test, go to the edge... and sometimes go over.

    Submit a comment

  • Bill Kays
    Bill Kays
    - March 18, 2013 at 12:02:53

    Parents have gotten quite silly in this NANNY STATE we are living in. Parents run around frantically trying to keep their kids from every single possible bad or hurtful experience out there in the real world. Listen, it is one thing to protect our children from harm but it is another to be over protective, as most parents today are. We as a society, should not keep them from experiencing life changing, character building activities. It is bad enough that our schools teach them the state's agenda, but we do not teach them math, english, science, phys ed, how to physically write, it is sad. As a result our children to not know how to live or even inter act with other people. They (have lost) (no longer get taught) their people skills. Yes, they can function in this present society, but what happens when this present society changes, what happens if computers cease to be, what do our children really know without Google?? They are missing out on life's lessons.

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    • Username
      NO MORE FAMILY, COMMUNITY LIFE
      - March 18, 2013 at 15:33:45

      Bill, don't you think this has to do mostly with loss of real true "family life", no home for children, no parents teaching them. Children are herded into daycare warehouses and made to walk miles by two's and programmed to do as all the others are doing, like it or not. Nothing individual or inspiring in that kind of mechanical training. What are they 'training' for in that? By mother and grandmother who really knows the difference. And I suspect you do too, Bill, and many more out there. gram

    • Bill Kays
      Bill Kays
      - March 18, 2013 at 17:04:21

      Gram, you are right. It was the destruction of the family that began in the 60's and continues through to today. You should watch the movie "INDOCTRINATION" to get the real scoop on schools and how they were all hijacked 80 or more years ago . 60's was free love, 70's oil prices up mother has to leave home to work, 80's promoted homosexuality as a normal lifestyle, 90's perpetuated the environmental movement, sustainability and everything now has to be green, in this milennium they trick us into thinking we are under attack by invisible terrorists so that we willingly give up our rights. SOMETHING IS WRONG.

  • Username
    Close Calls
    - March 18, 2013 at 10:07:56

    And in Argentia Newfoundland children used to scare the wits out of their mothers by climbing up and then sliding down jibs in the icebergs that floated close enough to be reached by children! But on Dartmouth's gentle lake Banook (1941 - 42) a beautiful little friend, nine-year-old Joanie F, drowned after trying to skate on thin ice near the very edge of the lake. I can see her yet, like a doll, in her casket, unforgettable for her family and many friends and schoolmates.

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    Ray Mahar
    - March 17, 2013 at 23:53:38

    I in no way want to approve the practice, But "Stompin Ice cakes " was the east enders kids favorite sport for generations Down behind the CNR Station. Our mothers lived in fear that we would drown. We fell in, Belly flopped on the ice cakes. Froze our pants. Saved each other. Had a great time. And the girls stomped as well. I cant recall a lose of life . we would laugh and cheer "Close Calls" I know now how dangerous it was. But we were invincible.

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