Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Mom Delivers Twins By Herself In Husband's Pickup Truck, Names Them Dodge And Sierra

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2015 05:09 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The old Dodge pickup is beaten up after summers of mining in the Yukon, but Nika Guilbault plans to keep it for another 16 years.
     
    By then, her newborn twins, Henry Dodge and Nevada Sierra, will be old enough to boast about driving the same truck in which they were born.
     
    When Guilbault awoke early Jan. 28 at her home in Sorrento, B.C., which about 430 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, she was sure she was going into labour.
     
    She new from experience she would have to get to a hospital in Kamloops quickly because her first daughter, now two, was a fast birth.
     
    "We knew it could be quite quick, but it was faster than we thought," said Guilbault. "I basically went from not any contractions to full labour and having a baby within half-an-hour — and it’s an hour drive from Sorrento to Kamloops.”
     
    As husband Chris St. Jean steered the truck down the highway, coaching his wife on her breathing while holding the phone so Guilbault could talk to her midwife, baby Nevada was born.
     
    "I had to give her two breaths of air to get her going and she perked right up and her eyes were opened, so I tucked her in my shirt to keep her warm and was just waiting for the next one, and hoping we’d get there," Guilbault said.
     
    "I wouldn’t let my husband pull over because I knew we needed to get there because there was another one coming."
     
    They made it to Royal Inland Hospital's parking lot before her second twin was born, with staff helping at the last moments.
     
    Guilbault is grateful everything worked out, as Henry arrived feet first, with his umbilical cord around his neck.
     
    "We were lucky it was the middle of the night and we had amazing road conditions and it wasn’t too cold out or anything," she said.
     
    Had they lived farther from the hospital, or faced bad weather, Guilbault said she would have given birth on the side of the road.
     
    Both babies are now doing well, but Guilbault said because her "Dodge twins" were premature, they won't come home for a few weeks.
     
    In another twist to the story, the truck in which the twins were born is the vehicle Guilbault and her husband used while filming Yukon Gold, a TV show focused on mining, which added the couple to its cast for its third season.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
    TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Indian Couple's Three-And-Half-Year-Old Son Refused Entry Into Canada

    Indian Couple's Three-And-Half-Year-Old Son Refused Entry Into Canada
    A three-and-half-year-old Indian boy has been refused reunion with his parents -- living in Canada as permanent residents for about two years -- because of a human error and apparently inflexible governmental reading of immigration regulations, a media report said Thursday.

    Indian Couple's Three-And-Half-Year-Old Son Refused Entry Into Canada

    Relative Begs Secret Letter-Writer To Reveal Self To Solve Arson That Killed Three BC Women And Baby

    Relative Begs Secret Letter-Writer To Reveal Self To Solve Arson That Killed Three BC Women And Baby
    A family member of three women and a baby killed in a Prince Rupert, B.C., apartment arson 25 years ago is pleading for an anonymous letter writer to help solve the cold case.

    Relative Begs Secret Letter-Writer To Reveal Self To Solve Arson That Killed Three BC Women And Baby

    B.C. To Post Budget Surplus, But Spending Not On Agenda, Says Finance Minister

    B.C. To Post Budget Surplus, But Spending Not On Agenda, Says Finance Minister
    VICTORIA — Finance Minister Mike de Jong says this year's budget bottom line is rosier than originally forecast but that doesn't mean the government is about to embark on a spending spree.

    B.C. To Post Budget Surplus, But Spending Not On Agenda, Says Finance Minister

    Big city mayors try to leverage election year as they press feds for money

    Big city mayors try to leverage election year as they press feds for money
    TORONTO — Canada's big city mayors met on Thursday hoping to leverage a looming federal election into billions of dollars worth of commitments from Ottawa for transit, affordable housing and other big-money projects.

    Big city mayors try to leverage election year as they press feds for money

    Explore newly open foreign markets, trade minister tells shy Canadian companies

    Explore newly open foreign markets, trade minister tells shy Canadian companies
    OTTAWA — The federal government faces a new hurdle as it shifts from negotiating new free trade deals to implementing them: Canadian companies that are overly cautious about courting new business overseas.

    Explore newly open foreign markets, trade minister tells shy Canadian companies

    PrevNext