Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

North

Watson Lake man recounts escape from car sinking in Yukon River

Roger Latondress was driving home to Watson Lake on a snowy evening this week when he sailed off the road and into the frigid Yukon River.

'It was either hit the bridge, or fly off into the Yukon River. So away I went,' says driver about icy plunge

In snowy conditions, Roger Latondress drove off the road at the Lewes River Bridge on the Alaska Highway south of Whitehorse, where it crosses the Yukon River. He landed in the river. (Murray Lundberg)

A Watson Lake, Yukon, man defied the odds this week when he crashedhis car into the frigid Yukon River, squeezed out the window of the sinking vehicle and swam for his life.

Roger Latondress, 64,was on his way home Monday froma shopping trip toWhitehorsein aMazda 6 he borrowed from a friend. The carwas carrying groceries, Christmas presentsand a new set of dentures.
Roger Latondress (left) was all smiles the day after his brush with death. He's pictured here with his friend Lee Goodwin. (Lee Goodwin)

He hadn't gone far before the snow made it difficult to see the road. When he reached the Lewes River Bridge, on the Alaska Highway about 30 kilometres south of Whitehorse,he misjudged the road and veered the wrong way.

"The minute Idid that, Irealized Imade a huge mistake," Latondress said. "It was either hit the bridge, or fly off into the Yukon River. So away Iwent, off into the Yukon River."

"My whole life flashed in front of methis is the way I'm going to go, eh?"

Narrow escape

He hit the water with "a hell of a crash" and felt the icy water coming up his legs. That's when he "got busy" trying to extricate himself.

Latondress realized that opening his door would cause the car to sink faster, so he rolled down the window, which caused the sinking car to tilt.

"All I could say was 'oh my God, oh my God,'" Latondressrecalled. "I didn't even pay attention to how I felt, but by God, I gave it everything I had."

He managed to squeeze out and push himself away from the car just as it sank below the surface. Latondresssaid he doesn't know how to swim, but he managed to dog-paddle to the shoreabout10 metres away.

Numb with cold, hecrawled up the snowy bank.

Latondresswas lucky two truckers had seen him go off the bridge and ran to help. They got him inside a warm truckand into some dry clothes.

'Bloody lucky'

An ambulancetook Latondressto hospital in Whitehorseto get checked out. His caregivers told him it was a miracle he survived.

"Then it all started sinking in all the events that happened had to be perfectly right on, or else I would have died," he said.

"I'm reviewing my whole life and thinking how bloody lucky I am to have enough stamina to do what I did, and the fact that those guys were right there to save my ass, too. Yeah, I'm happy to be here."

Friends of Latondress have started a GoFundMecampaign to salvage the submerged vehicleand hire a scuba diver to retrieve some of hisbelongings.