Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. man steps in to help reunite American family

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2020 01:06 AM
  • B.C. man steps in to help reunite American family

A woman from Georgia says her family's reunion was saved by a man from British Columbia who drove her family to the Alaskan border after they got stranded and appealed for help.

Lynn Marchessault began her trip with her two children, two dogs and a cat on Nov. 10 from Georgia to the Alaska border to join her husband, who serves in the U.S. military.

She says all was going well until they hit B.C. and got caught in a snowstorm.

The family's pickup truck was pulling a U-Haul and did not have the appropriate winter tires to get through the winding, mountainous roads when they stopped at a highway lodge for temporary workers in Pink Mountain, B.C.

Marchessault says she began looking for someone passing through the area who could drive them when Gary Bath of Fort St. John stepped up to offer his help.

Bath, who is a military veteran, drove the family to the Alaska border near Beaver Creek, Yukon, because he says he wanted to help the family be together for Christmas.

He described the 1,700-kilometre drive as "quite windy and really bumpy in some areas" but nothing he couldn't handle.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Hurricane Teddy headed for Atlantic Canada

Hurricane Teddy headed for Atlantic Canada
Teddy's expected track now encompasses an area west of Halifax to just beyond the east coast of Cape Breton, and then stretches over eastern P.E.I. and the western half of Newfoundland.

Hurricane Teddy headed for Atlantic Canada

CPR board created for faster COVID response

CPR board created for faster COVID response
The novel coronavirus can create complications in the lungs, and many patients are placed on their bellies to improve ventilation.

CPR board created for faster COVID response

Ottawa summoned to settle N.S. fishing dispute

Ottawa summoned to settle N.S. fishing dispute
Sipekne'katik First Nation says its people have a treaty right to fish at any time. Non-Indigenous fishermen say the First Nation is illegally fishing off-season.

Ottawa summoned to settle N.S. fishing dispute

RCMP launch raid tied to White House ricin letter

RCMP launch raid tied to White House ricin letter
The home is located in a multi-unit building on Vauquelin Blvd. in St-Hubert, bordering a forest and not far from an airport.

RCMP launch raid tied to White House ricin letter

COVID-19 gains steam in Quebec, Ontario

COVID-19 gains steam in Quebec, Ontario
The news prompted Dr. Horacio Arruda, Quebec's public health director, to declare a second wave of COVID-19 had begun in the province.

COVID-19 gains steam in Quebec, Ontario

'It's like he snapped': spouse of N.S. gunman

'It's like he snapped': spouse of N.S. gunman
Fifty-one-year Gabriel Wortman took 22 lives on April 18-19 before police killed him at a service station in Enfield, N.S.

'It's like he snapped': spouse of N.S. gunman