Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia Pair Rescued As They Sunk Deep Into Thick Mud: 'It's Like Suction'

The Canadian Press, 20 Apr, 2016 01:55 PM
    WINDSOR, N.S. — An eight-year-old boy was waist deep in thick, goopy mud and still sinking when he and a would-be rescuer were dug free, fire officials said Wednesday.
     
    "When I came towards the scene there, the guys were yelling, 'They're still sinking,'" said Jamie Juteau of the Windsor Fire Department. "When mud gets around you, it's like suction."
     
    "The problem is, you don't know where the actual bottom is there — we won't know had the people not intervened if he would've gone down further."
     
    Juteau said the fire department received a 911 call about the pair sinking on the mudflats of Lake Pisiquid in Windsor at about 6:15 p.m. Monday.
     
    The boy had begun sinking while out playing, and the man became stuck after responding to his cries for help. A construction crew working nearby spotted the pair and threw down some sheets of plywood, said Juteau.
     
    "When they laid the plywood out, that distributed the weight, and they were able to get out there and actually dig around a little bit with shovels to try to get them extracted," he said.
     
    "Once you get the mud and stuff compressing against your chest, then it becomes difficult to breathe and then it can go a whole other way."
     
    Juteau said the boy was up to his waist in mud when he arrived, while the man was up to about mid-thigh.
     
    Firefighters wearing rescue suits used shovels to finish digging the two out of the muck, he said.
     
    "With the suction, they were really into (the mud). If you start pulling on them, you could really start causing some injuries to the joints and that type of thing. It'll hold you like concrete, if you're really into it." 
     
    The boy and the man, who Juteau said were not related, were not injured.
     
    "He's OK and I think he learned something out of it," said Juteau.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s Southern Coast Braces For More Wet Weather As Second Storm Makes Landfall

    B.C.'s Southern Coast Braces For More Wet Weather As Second Storm Makes Landfall
    VANCOUVER — Residents on British Columbia's South Coast will have little opportunity to dry off after a recent spate of wet weather.

    B.C.'s Southern Coast Braces For More Wet Weather As Second Storm Makes Landfall

    Crown's Non-Disclosure Of Vital Documents In Ivan Henry Trial 'Breathtaking': Lawyer

    Crown's Non-Disclosure Of Vital Documents In Ivan Henry Trial 'Breathtaking': Lawyer
    VANCOUVER — The lawyer of a man wrongfully imprisoned for 27 years says her client's 1983 sexual-assault trial is Canada's most egregious example of the Crown withholding evidence.

    Crown's Non-Disclosure Of Vital Documents In Ivan Henry Trial 'Breathtaking': Lawyer

    Parliament's Opening Debate Sees Sparks Fly Between Liberals, Conservatives

    OTTAWA — The promised new era of civility in Parliament is sounding a lot like a rehash of the federal election campaign.

    Parliament's Opening Debate Sees Sparks Fly Between Liberals, Conservatives

    Ontario Passes Patch-For-Patch Law To Combat Abuse Of Powerful Opiate Fentanyl

    Ontario Passes Patch-For-Patch Law To Combat Abuse Of Powerful Opiate Fentanyl
    TORONTO — The Ontario legislature has passed a private member's bill aimed at combating abuse of the pain killer fentanyl, which is blamed for at least 655 deaths in Canada in the past six years.

    Ontario Passes Patch-For-Patch Law To Combat Abuse Of Powerful Opiate Fentanyl

    Calgary Faces Both Uncertainty And Opportunity In 2016 After Oil Price Plunge

    Calgary Faces Both Uncertainty And Opportunity In 2016 After Oil Price Plunge
    Home prices are down, unemployment is up, food bank usage is climbing, and no one knows when things might turn around with oil below US$40 a barrel on Monday from highs of well over US$100 less than two years ago.

    Calgary Faces Both Uncertainty And Opportunity In 2016 After Oil Price Plunge

    Employers To Be Banned From Taking Employees' Tips In Ontario

    Employers To Be Banned From Taking Employees' Tips In Ontario
    TORONTO — The Ontario legislature is expected to pass a bill this afternoon that will make it illegal for employers to take a share of servers' tips.

    Employers To Be Banned From Taking Employees' Tips In Ontario