Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Edmonton Conductor Finds Cat Nearly Frozen Under Train Engine, Brings Him Home

The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2016 12:48 PM
    A Canadian National Railway conductor was checking the engines on his train early Sunday in Wainwright, Alta., when he heard a pathetic cry.
     
    "So I'm shining my light and I find him under the second engine above the wheels on a steel platform covered with ice and snow," said Brad Slater.
     
    He called his engineer, Will Munsey, to tell him he'd found something.
     
    "I said right to Will, 'I can't leave him.' I can't imagine leaving him to die, and going 10 hours on that train, not knowing. How could anybody do that?"
     
    Slater called the cat, which jumped right into his arms, and brought him into the cab of train Q199.
     
    He wrapped him in a T-shirt from his bag, slowly peeled off the ice that covered the feline, and gave the cat some water and bits of beef jerky that he had.
     
    The cat "scarfed" both up and "slept behind my back the whole way back to Edmonton," Slater said.
     
    When he got off duty, he called his wife, who came with a cat carrier and together they brought the cat home, even though they have three felines already.
     
    Slater said he gave the cat, who he's named Q199, a bath and took him to the vet Monday.
     
    "I slept with him last night. He slept right by my chest all night," Slater said. "He's a purr machine."
     
    Q199 has lost three-quarters of one ear and might lose some of the other one because he was so badly frostbitten.
     
    Other than that, the vet — who waived the checkup fee — gave him a clean bill of health.
     
    Slater — who is now being called Old Softy Slater by everyone at CN — says he has posted on Saskatoon missing pet pages, because he believes Q199 got on the train in that city and belongs to someone because he is so affectionate. The cat doesn't have a microchip or a tattoo to help find his owners.
     
    "It's a miracle. There's no other way to put this. The train was doing 60 miles per hour and he's underneath ... able to hold on and he's missing nails ... he could have fallen and got run over."
     
    Another coincidence: Slater got food poisoning on Friday and left work early. He said if that hadn't happened, he wouldn't have been working Sunday.
     
    Slater would like to keep Q199 and will slowly introduce him to his other cats. He hopes all will get along.
     
    Engineer Will Munsey said the cat and Slater have restored his faith in humanity.
     
    "I want to thank a stupid little cat and a big-hearted, young conductor for reminding me that little things can be pretty damned beautiful," Munsey wrote on Facebook.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. To Reduce Maximum Charge On Payday Loans, Seek Options To High Cost Lenders

    B.C. To Reduce Maximum Charge On Payday Loans, Seek Options To High Cost Lenders
      The maximum allowable charge for a payday loan in B.C. will drop from $23 to $17 for every $100 borrowed, starting Jan. 1, 2017.

    B.C. To Reduce Maximum Charge On Payday Loans, Seek Options To High Cost Lenders

    New Overdose Data In B.C. Expected To Show Numbers Down Slightly, Says Terry Lake

      Health Minister Terry Lake and Public Safety Minister Mike Morris make the announcement this afternoon in Vancouver.

    New Overdose Data In B.C. Expected To Show Numbers Down Slightly, Says Terry Lake

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office
    Peter Schilling, who saw the shooting from his second-floor office on Tuesday afternoon, said he was on the phone with a colleague staring out the window when he saw J. Randall Barrs get out of his car in the driveway of his Yorkville law office.

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop
    Const. Matthew MacGillivray, a former police sergeant, was demoted in January after a Halifax Regional Police disciplinary officer found he had used unnecessary force and engaged in discreditable conduct.

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa
    Taxpayers forked out $1.1 million to move some four dozen political staffers to Ottawa after Justin Trudeau's Liberals won power last fall.

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    A man and his common-law wife are dead after what police believe was a targeted, gang-related shooting in Calgary.

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting