Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rescuers of Saskatchewan toddler missing almost a day matter of fact

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2014 11:25 AM
    The rescuers of a Saskatchewan toddler who was missing for almost a day say they had only been searching for about 15 minutes when they found him.
     
    Jeffrey Custer and Kenny Canada got the call to help Sunday afternoon after Pelican Narrows RCMP were alerted to the two-year-old's disappearance.
     
    Custer, who is 24, and 17-year-old Canada say they were in an area known as the "ski hill" about a kilometre from the community school.
     
    The sound of crying led them into the bush, where they found the toddler wearing only a T-shirt and covered in bug bites.
     
    The boy was thirsty, but in otherwise good health and he is now in the care of Social Services.
     
    They say they walked less than a kilometre to his home and returned him to his family.
     
    "We were standing there in the rocks and then we heard a baby crying. We checked and that was him," Canada recalled.
     
    "I just picked him up and then we left from there and took him home," Custer said.
     
    Canada said the family had a simple message for the rescuers.
     
    "They said, 'Thank you.'"
     
    RCMP are trying to find out who was caring for the child and why it took so long to report him missing.
     
    "Obviously those are things we're going to check into," Cpl. Doug McLaren said Tuesday.
     
    "We're lucky that they found him."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's Ross Rifle More Peril Than Protection For First World War Soldiers

    Canada's Ross Rifle More Peril Than Protection For First World War Soldiers
    When soldiers in the throes of battle discard their rifles and pluck a different weapon from the hands of dead allies, there's clearly a serious problem.

    Canada's Ross Rifle More Peril Than Protection For First World War Soldiers

    Key deadline nears in class-action settlement for former orphanage residents

    Key deadline nears in class-action settlement for former orphanage residents
    HALIFAX - Fifteen years after going public with his story of child abuse, Tony Smith says he can't believe the day has come when a multi-million-dollar settlement involving a Halifax-area orphanage stands on the verge of being finalized.

    Key deadline nears in class-action settlement for former orphanage residents

    Silicon Valley North, Buzz or Bubble? What Vancouver Tech Veterans are Saying?

    Silicon Valley North, Buzz or Bubble? What Vancouver Tech Veterans are Saying?
    VANCOUVER - The Canadian founders of mobile gaming company A Thinking Ape embarked on a make-it-or-break-it quest to source first-rate tech wizards when they left Silicon Valley in 2010 to put down roots in Vancouver.

    Silicon Valley North, Buzz or Bubble? What Vancouver Tech Veterans are Saying?

    Justin Trudeau's Home Broken Into While Wife, Kids Slept: Spokeswoman

    Justin Trudeau's Home Broken Into While Wife, Kids Slept: Spokeswoman
    OTTAWA - Justin Trudeau's office says the Liberal leader's home was broken into Saturday morning while his wife and children slept.

    Justin Trudeau's Home Broken Into While Wife, Kids Slept: Spokeswoman

    New Brunswick Air Ambulance Plane Crash in Grand Manan Kills Pilot, Paramedic

    New Brunswick Air Ambulance Plane Crash in Grand Manan Kills Pilot, Paramedic
    GRAND MANAN, N.B. - A paramedic and a pilot died early Saturday when the chartered plane that airlifts people from Grand Manan island to hospitals on the New Brunswick mainland crashed near the island's airport runway.

    New Brunswick Air Ambulance Plane Crash in Grand Manan Kills Pilot, Paramedic

    B.C. Government: Tailings spill no risk to humans, but may harm aquatic life

    B.C. Government: Tailings spill no risk to humans, but may harm aquatic life
    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. - B.C. officials say sediment discharged from a tailings pond that spilled mining waste in the Cariboo region is not toxic for humans but may harm aquatic life.

    B.C. Government: Tailings spill no risk to humans, but may harm aquatic life