NSP employees rescue tourists
Father, two sons hang on to buoy line after canoe sucked through turbines
Headline:
By Heather Killen
The Spectator
NovaNewsNow.com
Three tourists are lucky to be alive, thanks to three fast-acting Nova Scotia Power employees, and an alert onlooker.
John Hopkins, of Bear River, Welsley Trimper, of Gulliver’s Cove, and Mark Theriault, of Bear River, helped rescue an Illinois man and his two sons from the icy water after their canoe capsized near the Annapolis River Tidal Power Plant recently.
"There was no thought involved, we just did it," said John
Hopkins. The three men were inside working as usual, when the commotion started.
"I heard a thump in the machine and went around to see what the crash was," he said. "Then Les Smith came in and told us there were people in the water."
Smith had noticed the three hanging onto a buoy line after their canoe had floated with the current and was sucked through the sluice gate and crushed in the turbines.
Hopkins said Smith called 911, and Theriault turned off the turbines, while he and Trimper wondered how they could reach the victims in the water.
"Mark hollered to us he knew where there was a beat-up-old-boat that was destined for the scrap yard -- he had just put it out there that morning," said Hopkins.
The rickety boat had no oars, so Hopkins and Trimper pulled themselves hand-over-hand along a boom cable until they reached the man and two boys and were able to pull them to safety.
Hopkins said he worried about the condition of the boys as they were pulled into the boat, they both looked as though they could be in shock.
"The little guy didn’t seem to be breathing," he said. "I kind of gave him a shove -- I don’t know if that helped -- and he seemed to start breathing."
Both the man and his two sons were taken to hospital for treatment of hypothermia, according to Const. James McKay, of the Annapolis Royal Police Department.
"Those guys are heroes," he said. "It was pretty serious. One of the boys coded, he was in very bad shape."