Times Colonist

‘Weirdest storm I’ve ever seen’ injures three teens

Severe winds tear through campground near Calgary

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BOTTREL, Alta. — Three teens are recovering from injuries after an intense storm tore through a campground northwest of Calgary and knocked a tree onto their tent.

Emergency Medical Services spokesman Adam Loria said four ambulances were dispatched to the campground in the hamlet of Bottrel Friday afternoon. Loria said all of the teens are boys and that one of them suffered multiple serious injuries, but is expected to survive.

Duane Needham, owner of the Bottrel General Store, which operates the campground for Rocky View County, said hail was so intense he couldn’t even see the campground from the store and dozens of trees were toppled.

Needham said his brother and niece were the first to arrive at the tent where the three boys, aged 16 and 17, were staying.

He said they had to remove a branch that was pinning the boy who was most seriously injured, noting the boy was speaking and was able to move his hands and feet.

“It was the weirdest storm I’ve ever seen,” Needham said. “It was quite a mess. It was something you had to see to believe.”

Loria said one of the teens was taken by ground ambulance to Foothills Hospital in

Calgary in stable, non-life-threatenin­g condition. The remaining two were taken to Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary with minor injuries, Loria said.

Needham said that when his brother and niece made it to the tent, the boy that was stuck under a branch was having trouble breathing because of the pressure.

“They snapped the branch and took the pressure off,” he said.

Needham said he didn’t know where the boys were from but believed they were local, noting their parents arrived at the scene within 20 minutes.

Needham suspects it may have been a tornado.

Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada meteorolog­ist Sara Hoffman said the weather office issued a severe thundersto­rm watch for a large area of southern Alberta on Friday. She said she has seen pictures of accumulate­d hail, but said an investigat­ion into the weather event is still ongoing.

Hoffman said major damage doesn’t necessaril­y mean there was a twister.

“Severe wind gusts can be more damaging than a tornado,” she said.

Alberta frequently experience­s intense summer storms with hail, and the Insurance Bureau of Canada says one last month in the Calgary area that pounded homes, vehicles and crops caused almost $1.2 billion in insured damage, making it the fourth most expensive insured natural disaster in Canadian history.

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