Nearly killed by frostbite, Hopedale woman grateful as her life gets back on track - Action News
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Nearly killed by frostbite, Hopedale woman grateful as her life gets back on track

Gerri Boase almost lost her life after she passed out one February night in Hopedale. As John Gaudi writes, the young mom is on the mend.

Despite losing 8 fingers and part of a leg, Gerri Boase is on the mend

Gerri Boase cuddles with her four-year old daughter, Nancy Lampe. (John Gaudi/CBC)

A Labrador woman wholost fingers and part of one leg after falling asleep outdoors in sub-zero temperatures is recovering from a horrific experience, thanks to family and friends who pitched in to help.

In February of last year, Hopedaleresident Gerri Boase, 29, fell asleep in a komatik box in front of the community's hydro diesel plant where she was exposed to extreme cold.

She doesn't remember much of what happened.

"I kind of just remember being down in the hotel playing cards," she said in an interview with CBC Radio's Labrador Morning.

"I can remember having a few beers and I went outside for a cigarette, and then it all blacked out from then."

Allan Vincent, who works at the hydro diesel plant, doesn't know why but he didn't follow his normal route into work that morning. It was very cold around -40 C, without windchill, he figures.

'No movement, no sound, nothing'

At first, he saw what he thought was a black object in the komatik box. Only after getting closer did he realize it was actually a coat.

Gerri Boase sits in her wheelchair at the top of a steep set of stairs at her former apartment in Hopedale. Her family has since found an accessible, one-storey apartment. (John Gaudi/CBC)

"As I got closer, I looked inside and I could tell it was a person lying inside the komatik box I reached inside and started to shake," he said.

"Not a thing, no movement, no sound, nothing."

Vincent saidthere was no answer when he first tried calling the RCMP from inside the hydro plant. Next, he called his wife to contact the clinic, to tell them that he'd found a person. Then he went back outside and tried to rouse the person lying in the box in a fetal position.

"I shook a bit, and then nothing, and then just getting ready to stop, I look down and I could see her arm moving."

Allan Vincent found Gerri Boase lying in this komatik box in February 2016. He and two other men towed the komatik to the health clinic by snowmobile. (John Gaudi/CBC)

It was only after Vincent and two other men in the vicinity brought Gerri to the clinic pulling the komatik by snowmobile that he realized who it was.

Told to prepare for the worst

Meanwhile, Piercy Boase, Gerri's father, said the staff at the health clinic in Hopedale told family members they should prepare for the worst.

"We thought she was gone," he said. "She wasn't breathing. I mean, she never had no breath for a couple of seconds."

After staff at the clinic told Piercy and his wife Frances that Gerri was coming around, he promised his daughter that they would take care of her children while she recovered.

Gerri's parents sold 50/50 tickets and cold plates, and raffled off wood, to ensure that Gerri's children wouldn't go hungry while she was at hospital in St. John's.

Allan Vincent put a snowmobile up for auction to raise funds for the family.

Piercy Boase is grateful for the support from the community, but he saida lack of financial help from the provincial government has been frustrating, and added that help was not forthcoming even after his daughter returned home.

"I think we were the social services ourself. I don't know how we done it, but we done it," he said.

"It's been a tough year. I go haul wood and I can't even get wood for myself because I end up selling it to help my family, help ourselves and help Gerri's family."

8 fingers, part of right leg amputated

Gerri was first sent to the Labrador Health Centre in Happy Valley-Goose Bay before being transferred tothe Health Sciences Centre in St. John's, where she had eightfingers and part of her right leg amputated.

She spent more thaneight months recovering from her injuries before moving back home to Hopedale in October.

"It's all so stressful knowing that I'm the reason this happened to me. All because of alcohol, I guess," she said, feeling heartbroken over not being able to play games with her children, like hide and seek, the way she used to.

At first, Gerri moved into her parents' house and then into the Newfoundland and Labrador Housing unit she had lived in before.

It was a two-storey duplex with no wheelchair ramp. Gerri's boyfriend, Henoche Lampe, had to carry her backwards up a steep set of stairs to use the bathroom on the second floor where the bedrooms were also located.

Frances and Piercy Boase, Gerri's parents, sold tickets and cold plates and even raffled off wood to raise money to support Gerri and her family. (John Gaudi/CBC)

Although it never happened, she worried her boyfriend could slip taking her up and down the 14 stairs in her wheelchair. Gerri's three children camped out with them in the living room.

"It's not the same anymore. I missmaking money for helping with the house and feeding my kids, and I miss going to school to get my education."

Gave up job at local hotel

Gerri hasn't been able to work in more than a year due to her injuries. She had to give up working as a waitress and cook at the local hotel in Hopedale, and stopped going to adult basic education classes to get thehigh school diploma she was also working on.

Gerri Boase spent over eight months in St. John's recovering from her injuries, which resulted in her losing fingers and part of her leg due to frostbite. (John Gaudi/CBC)

For several months now, she's relied on the government family allowance, community donations and support from family members to put food on the table for her children. The mother of three, who is also expecting a baby in June, saidher children are doing what they can to help out.

"My kids, they shouldn't have to be telling me they're hungry because we got no food, " she said, adding that her sonhas taken on responsibilities that parents usually manage.

"My oldest boy, he does stuff no nine-year-old should be doing. It breaks my heart."

At the beginning of March, Gerri and her family moved into a single-storey apartment, equipped with a wheelchair ramp, that is provided through Newfoundland and Labrador Housing.

Gerri Boase said her family camped out in the living room of their former apartment in Hopedale before a new apartment was found. (Gerri Boase/CBC)

After a report aired on CBC's Labrador Morning, Gerri's mother, Frances Boase, said the province also contacted her daughter to fill out an application for assistance.

'People have really jumped on board'

And the community support continues.

It's overwhelming and the people have really jumped on board to help out here.- Jackie Compton-Hobbs

Jackie Compton-Hobbs and Melanie Muzzerall of Happy Valley-Goose Bay were so moved by Gerri's story after hearing it on CBC they organized a donation collection for Gerri's family.

"It's overwhelming and the people have really jumped on board to help out here," Compton-Hobbs said.

Everything from donations of food, toys and clothing were collected to send to Gerri's family in Hopedale, including newborn items for Gerri's baby due in June.

There was also a special birthday party held for Gerri's daughter on Saturday. Nancy didn't get to celebrate her proper birthday a few weeks ago because the family couldn't afford it.

Compton-Hobbs and Muzzerall sent up birthday supplies, gifts and a birthday cake to Hopedale so Nancy could finally celebrate her fourth birthday with her friends and family.

"I hope that we get to see a little girl with a beaming smile, just happy and getting to celebrate a birthday like every other kids gets to celebrate, " Muzzerall said.

Gerri Boase said her three children Jonathan Boase, 9, Nancy Lampe, 4, and Andy Lampe, 6 keep her positive in what has been a difficult year. (John Gaudi/CBC)