'Never did I expect to get a call like this': Carbonear woman loses partner in Iqaluit explosion - Action News
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'Never did I expect to get a call like this': Carbonear woman loses partner in Iqaluit explosion

A Carbonear, N.L. man died almost immediately following a blast between two homes in Iqaluit last week. A man from Burin died later from his injuries, and another is in hospital.

Blast also killed Burin man, 57, and injured a 26-year-old who remains in hospital

Noel Priddle, 50, died in an explosion in Iqaluit on July 6. (Submitted/Mike Salomonie/CBC)

Almost a week after Noel Priddle, 50,was killed in a July 6explosion in Iqaluit, his family is preparing to lay him to rest in Carbonear, N.L.

"I screamed, I had my moment. It was devastating," says his partner of eight years, Diane Kennedy.

Kennedy saidPriddle'sbody made it back home Tuesday for a Thursday burial in Victoria, where the man grew up.

Priddleand two other Newfoundlanders were repairing a boat parked between two homes when the blast occurred. He died almost immediately, while the two other victims weremedevacedto hospital in Ottawa.

John Manning, 57, from Burin, succumbed to his injuries on Sunday, while a 26-year-old man who is also originally from Burin is still being treated.

John Manning, 57, owned the company that employed all three men in Iqaluit. (Gerald Manning)

Funeral services for Manning will be held in Iqaluit and in Newfoundland.

The Office of the Chief Coroner has determined the deaths were accidental, but the cause of the blast has not been determined.

'A chance you take when you go to work'

Kennedy told CBC News she was a bit worried when she didn't hear from Priddle, who usually called when he got off work at 6:30 p.m.

She wasn't prepared for the horrifying news that came in a phone call from someone else.

Noel Priddle and Diane Kennedy had been together for 8 years, living in Carbonear. (Submitted)

"I was out mowing the grass, when I came in my house phone was ringing," said Kennedy. It was a woman from the company Priddleworked with in Iqaluit, who told her there'd been an accident, and the menwere in hospital.

"I ran out through the garden to my sister's house which is just behind me. To this day I don't know if I spoke to her or if my sister spoke to herand I got the information from my sister."

Kennedy said a doctor called her a little after that to tell her Priddle, who has a 19-year-old son, had passed away.

"I've often said to him, when he was going back on turnarounds, 'Noel, if something ever happens to you, how am I going to know?'"

Talking to Priddle's boss at KCM Maintenance and Construction on Saturday, Kennedy said she told him it wasn't his fault.

"It's nobody's fault, it's a chance you take when you go to work in the daytime. But never did I expect to get a call like this."

Always had a smile

Kennedy said Priddle had been working in Iqaluitfor almost 10 months, in stints ofeight weeks there and three weeks at home.

Funeral services for Noel Priddle, 50, will be held in Carbonear on Thursday. (Submitted)

"He could laugh and carry on and joke just as well as the next one, but if Noel had something to say, he was saying it. He was very straightforward," she said.

"And he always had a huge smile on his face, always."

All the messages of support from friends and family, the company, and the whole city ofIqaluithave been "amazing," Kennedy said.

She said she spoke to the 26-year-old survivor in hospital Monday night.

"His words to me were, 'Oh, so you're the Diane Noel was always talking about," she said.

With files from CBC North