Family rescued after tubing accident pushes them against fallen trees in B.C. river - Action News
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British Columbia

Family rescued after tubing accident pushes them against fallen trees in B.C. river

Katelyn Olson from Trail, B.C., is thanking Darrell Kube and his family of Grand Forks for rescuing her family from the fast-moving water under fallen trees in the Kettle River.

Quick-thinking witness pulled them out of Kettle River in Grand Forks, B.C.

Trail, B.C., resident Katelyn Olson and her family and friends were stuck in the strong current under two fallen trees in Kettle River near Grand Forks, B.C., on Thursday. (Submitted by Darrell Kube)

Katelyn Olson didn't expect a leisurely tubingadventure along a B.C. rivertoend with her family being pulled out byrope, soshe's grateful their rescuer was at hand.

On Thursday afternoon around 4:30 p.m. PT, the Trail, B.C., resident and her family accidentally floated neartwo largefallen trees in the Kettle River and became trapped in the strong current flowing beneath themin Grand Forks, about six kilometres north of the Canada-U.S. border. in the Kootenay-Boundary region.

"There was something like a rapid that caught our tube," Olson said Friday to Dominika Lirette, the guest host of CBC's Radio West."Our tube as well as our feet smacked right into the trees."

Olson, 21, said as she and her boyfriendtried to figure out what to do, her mother,sister andtwo friends alsocrashed into the trees and their tubes flipped over.

"The current was so strong that as soon as the tubes flipped, they were sucked underneath the trees," she went on. "They were trying their hardest to be able to get out of the water."

Katelyn Olson, left, and her boyfriend first hit the fallen trees when floating along Kettle River. (Submitted by Katelyn Olson)

Olson's sister Caroline and her friendboth hit their heads on the trees when they tried to get out of the strong currents. Caroline sustaineda concussion and was later hospitalized.

"[Caroline] was going to puke and she was really, really dizzy, and her friend had a really bad headache," Olson said.

Her mother injured hershoulders hitting the trees.

Caroline Olson, left, was hospitalized for a concussion after smashing her head in the accident while her mother, right, injured her shoulders (Submitted by Katelyn Olson)

They were rescuedthanks Darrell Kube andhis wife and friendswho livenearby. TheGood Samaritansdragged them out of the river with ropes and drove them back to where their vehicles were parked.

"He said, 'As soon as I saw your eyes go wider and wider and wider, I knew you were in serious danger,' " she said about Kube's friend. "He jumped in as well as two of his family members, and they pretty much grabbed on to me and they tried to pull me out."

"They grabbed us water and blankets," she continued. "He pretty much went into [a] full-on hero mode it was honestly amazing."

The fallen trees along the Kettle River are under provincial jurisdiction, says the City of Grand Forks. (Submitted by Darrell Kube)

Kube who moved to Grand Forks from Alberta several months ago said the trees fell a week ago and had wreaked havoc on tubers and rafters.

"I'm surprised that the city will not do anything," he told CBC's Christine Coulter.

The City of Grand Forks told CBC that Kettle River as well as the sweeperin it falls within the provincial jurisdiction.

The B.C. Ministry of Forests wrote to CBC that it doesn't usually remove fallen trees from rivers and creeks.

"We encourage the public to be precautious and aware when it comes to potential hazards that could exist in the outdoors like fallen trees, rapids, waterfalls, and other hazards," the provincial statement said.

Meanwhile, Olson and her family are camping in Christina Lake, about 21 kilometres east of Grand Forks. She saidCaroline has beengetting better.

"She's doing OK now my dad's a nurse, so he's been checking on her pretty much constantly since that happened, making sure she's drinking enough fluids and making sure she doesn't get too dizzy."

Tap the link below to hear Katelyn Olson's interview on Radio West:

With files from Radio West and Christine Coulter