Iceberg collapse proves risks of getting too close: videographer - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 06:29 AM | Calgary | -1.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NLVideo

Iceberg collapse proves risks of getting too close: videographer

A central Newfoundland woman who captured the sudden disintegration of an arched iceberg says she has learned a lesson about getting too close to the massive structures.

Video shows how iceberg suddenly begins to crack, and within seconds, tonnes of ice had fallen

RAW: Iceberg collapse

10 years ago
Duration 1:02
Wanda Stead posted this video of a sudden collapse of an iceberg in Bay of Exploits

A central Newfoundland woman who captured the sudden disintegration of an arched iceberg says she has learned alesson aboutgetting too close to the massive structures.

"I think my heart came up, and I swallowed it. I was petrified," said Wanda Stead, who unexpectedly caught the collapse on video on Tuesday while she was enjoying a day on the Bay of Exploits with her husband. The couple, who live in Gander, have a cabin in Cottlesville.

Stead's video shows how the arch in the iceberg suddenly began to crack, and within seconds, tonnes of ice had fallen to the bay below.

"I think my heart came up, and I swallowed it. I was petrified- Wanda Stead

Stead's voice is audible in the video, with a blood-curdling instruction to her husband: "Run, Rick, go go!"

With her husband hitting their boat's engine, the couple were able to move to a safer position, although Stead told CBC News on Thursday that her impression at the time was that their lives were in immediate peril.

"All I could see was this tidal wave coming toward us," she said.

Wanted to warn others

It may not have turned out to be a tidal wave, but the bay's waters changed immediately, with a powerful wave discharged in moments.

Stead said she shared the video to warn others of the dangers of approaching icebergs.

"We were too close," she said, estimating that they had parked their boat between 100 and 150 feet or 30 to 45 metres away from the iceberg.

"Accidents are unplanned events," she said. "You never know with something that big and people need to know."

Stead said that she felt rattled and drained by the end of the ordeal, but that, to her surprise, her video did not show much shaking.