Journal Pioneer

Motorcycli­st mourned

Woman, doctor stopped to help at crash that took life of Kelvin Wood

- ALISON JENKINS

Brenda Biemann didn’t expect to try and save a life on her way home from work one pleasant summer evening. But that’s what happened when she and her husband stopped at the scene of an accident.

Around 5 p.m. on Aug. 8, Brenda and her husband, Klaus, were driving toward Kensington when they saw the tail end of the collision that claimed the life of a motorcycli­st on Route 2.

“We caught the last roll and pulled over,” said Biemann, describing how they saw the motorcycle roll over its rider.

She and Klaus got out to see what they could do to help.

A 52-year-old New Brunswick man was riding his motorcycle when the bike collided with a pickup truck at the top of the hill on the west side of Hunter River.

On her way to help, Biemann met up with a doctor who also got out of his vehicle to offer aid. He was on his way to work a shift at the Prince County Hospital. He put Biemann to work cutting away the man’s shirt while he retrieved his doctor’s bag from his car.

She can’t remember the doctor’s name, but together they did what they could at the side of the road.

They didn’t take off his helmet and administer­ed modified CPR until emergency staff arrived.

“I knew it was bad,” said Biemann. “I kept saying to him, ‘Hang on, hang on.’”

Soon, Island EMS, the New Glasgow Fire Department and RCMP arrived and took over.

Biemann was surprised at herself for remaining so calm in what she described as an “organized but chaotic” situation.

But what she experience­d is sinking in now.

“It didn’t hit me until after. It was not the nicest thing to see.”

The victim, Wood, was vacationin­g on P.E.I. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Donna Eagles is mourning his loss as a longtime volunteer and a member of the Christian Motorcycli­sts Associatio­n.

Eagles started the annual Atlanticad­e motorcycle festival, with co-organizer Dale Hicks, 13 years ago. Wood been volunteeri­ng since the beginning alongside the Christian riders.

“Regardless if it’s raining or sunshine ... he can be depended on to be there and do what is asked of him with a smile and a joke and good humour,” said Eagles.

Wood’s death is a blow to her and all those who knew him, but that he was killed while riding only makes the pain harder to bear, she said.

“It is a great loss to the motorcycle

community. He was a great man, a great human being – he will be greatly missed.”

A memorial service for Wood was held Thursday, Aug. 15, at the York Funeral Home in Fredericto­n, N.B. Donations in his memory can be made to the Samaritan’s Purse organizati­on.

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