Melting Ice
This is the snow-covered river than winds through our city. It becomes a walking trail in the winter months after it has frozen over. However, in the past week or so, the temperatures are melting and the ice has cracked.
Here's a good news story that happened several days ago when a man was walking his dog along this river. This is what he writes:
We were walking in the middle of the river and she headed for the other side – the bank – and I was following her and was about 20 feet behind her,” explained Tim. “Before I could get to her, basically half her body was submerged in the water.” Misty had fallen through a soft spot of ice near an outfall, where run-off from the city's roadways drains into the river. Tim stopped and didn't go any farther. He called for help and yelled at her to keep trying to get out.
“When I realized that wasn't doing anything, I ran home and told my wife to call 911. I grabbed some ropes and thought I would come up with some miracle-type saving of her life,” he said. But when Tim got back, Misty had already managed to pull herself out of the hole. “I didn't save her. I was certainly going to try, but I wasn't the hero. She got herself out.”
After a hot shower, the 14-year-old Lab was as good as new. Just hours after the ordeal, she was begging Tim to go for another walk. “I'm not going to be walking on the river in the winter. There are just too many different things to watch for and I can't prevent that from happening again,” he said.
Freak winter
By the time the fire department arrived, Misty and Tim were already back ... home safe and sound. Fire chief Ray Richards said this is the first ice related call the fire department has received in several years. “The fortunate thing about the incident that occurred was that it was on the Sturgeon River, which is a very shallow river,” he said, noting that shallow water can still present a drowning hazard for small children and animals.
The “freak winter” this year, he said, has resulted in a lot of runoff draining into the river. According to the City..., traditional temperatures would see ponds and basins frozen and inactive at this time of year, but the warm weather has created significant water flow from snow melt through the storm systems. Residents are encouraged to stay off the river, ponds and local lakes, as they are not safe for walking or skating. “Generally people are pretty wise and do not take chances and stay away from the river and the ponds,” added Richards. “Anytime there is open water or water standing on ice, you should not be out there.”
Misty has recovered from her fall unscathed, but it was a close call, admitted Tim. “She got a new lease on life and today was another example of it,” he remarked. His canine companion's hind legs were replaced with artificial joints last year. “If those legs were crippled like they were a month ago, she wouldn't have come out of that hole. But her legs kept her going for 10 minutes straight, dog paddling. They saved her life.”
In early December, Misty was unable to walk and was not responding to pain or arthritis medication. But within a matter of days, “it was like some kind of miracle occurred,” noted Tim. “The medicine started working, she started jogging with me … “If the dog hadn't fallen in and made it onto shore, I was next,” he said. “In a lot of ways (she) could have saved my life.”
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