Tuesday, May 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

Close Call: Saskatoon Man Hit In Face By Axe Flying Through Windshield

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 May, 2018 11:44 AM
    SASKATOON — A Saskatoon man says he was cut on the forehead and suffered a concussion after an axe came flying through his truck's windshield.
     
     
    Mackenzie Peddle says he doesn't remember getting hit in the face while he was driving home to Saskatoon from Yorkton, Sask., earlier this month.
     
     
    He says when he came to, the truck's windshield was shattered, there was an axe lying near him and blood was spattered over his face and seats.
     
     
    Peddle says he must have passed out after somehow managing to pull over to the side of Highway 16 near the community of Plunkett.
     
     
    The electrician says his foot was on the brake and the truck was still in gear when a passerby approached.
     
     
    RCMP say they are investigating but have no leads as to where the axe came from.
     
     
    "A lady pulled over and woke me up on the side of the road. I didn't really know what happened or how long I'd been out," Peddle told CKOM Radio. 
     
     
    He credits the sunglasses he was wearing for saving his eye from the axe blade.
     
     
    Peddle said he managed to phone RCMP and take some photos of the damage to his face and truck.
     
     
    An officer arrived and took his own photos, then drove up and down the highway to see if any other debris had fallen off a vehicle.
     
     
    "He went around to the farms and farmhouses, but no one had seen anything," Peddle said.
     
     
    Humboldt RCMP said Tuesday they were looking for the public's help in the investigation.
     
     
    Peddle said it's not the first time something has flown through his windshield while he was driving on the highway.
     
     
    He said about a decade ago, he was driving his car when a long piece of rebar fell off a truck, bounced off the pavement and pierced the windshield on the driver's side — missing him by inches.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Overdose Emergency Response Centre Set Up In B.C. To Combat Overdose Deaths

    Overdose Emergency Response Centre Set Up In B.C. To Combat Overdose Deaths
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia has established a command centre to provide a co-ordinated response to a provincial overdose crisis in an effort to help people access services that could save their lives.

    Overdose Emergency Response Centre Set Up In B.C. To Combat Overdose Deaths

    Police Identify Alberta Couple As Missing Plane Pilot, Passenger

    Police Identify Alberta Couple As Missing Plane Pilot, Passenger
    PENTICTON, B.C. — Police say the search continues for an Alberta couple who were in a small plane believed to have gone down in southeastern British Columbia.

    Police Identify Alberta Couple As Missing Plane Pilot, Passenger

    Verdict Set For Dec. 20 In Case Of B.C. Ex-Mountie Charged With Sexual Assault

    Verdict Set For Dec. 20 In Case Of B.C. Ex-Mountie Charged With Sexual Assault
    Fifty-two-year-old Tim Shields, who was a high-profile spokesman for the RCMP in B.C., has pleaded not guilty to one count of sexual assault.

    Verdict Set For Dec. 20 In Case Of B.C. Ex-Mountie Charged With Sexual Assault

    Funeral Chain Creates Program To Underscore The Dangers Of Fentanyl

    Funeral Chain Creates Program To Underscore The Dangers Of Fentanyl
    LANGLEY, B.C. — A funeral services chain in British Columbia is developing a program it hopes will cut the number of drug deaths related to fentanyl among children and young adults.

    Funeral Chain Creates Program To Underscore The Dangers Of Fentanyl

    My Family Is 'Shiv Bhakt', Won't Do 'Dalali' Over Religion: Rahul Gandhi

    My Family Is 'Shiv Bhakt', Won't Do 'Dalali' Over Religion: Rahul Gandhi
    Gandhi’s visit to the Somnath temple got engulfed in a controversy after his name was found written on the entry register for non-Hindus.

    My Family Is 'Shiv Bhakt', Won't Do 'Dalali' Over Religion: Rahul Gandhi

    CREA Wants Parents To Assist Children With Home Purchase With Their RRSPs

    CREA Wants Parents To Assist Children With Home Purchase With Their RRSPs
    Under the current plan, first-time buyers can withdraw up to $25,000 from their RRSPs to contribute to the purchase of a home. The tax-free loan must generally be repaid within 15 years.

    CREA Wants Parents To Assist Children With Home Purchase With Their RRSPs