Vancouver Sun

Trapped man survives on Gatorade, apples

Seriously injured 23-year-old stuck in truck for days after going off cliff

- AMY SMART The Canadian Press With a file from the Victoria Times Colonist

A 23-year-old Vancouver Island man is recovering in a Victoria hospital after his truck went off a cliff and he was pinned in the vehicle with a broken femur for several days.

Duncan Moffat’s uncle, Bill Macnab, said his nephew survived on a bottle of Gatorade and a bag of apples that he had picked from his dad’s yard, which thankfully rolled within reach.

He said he found the Gatorade on the third day and just saw God when he saw that. He was just so happy.

“The car was driver-side tilted down. He couldn’t undo his seatbelt because the weight of his body was on it and he had a broken shoulder, ribs, he had a partially collapsed lung as well, and he had the broken leg,” Macnab said from his home in Campbell River.

“He said he found the Gatorade on the third day and just saw God when he saw that. He was just so happy to have this drink.”

Macnab said he can’t imagine Moffat’s torment as he waited for help. “On the fourth and fifth day, he must have had some horrific thoughts,” he said.

Macnab said Moffat had been out of touch with the family for almost 10 days, but he told his father, Glen Moffat, that he believes he was stuck in the truck for five days, after he was rescued Tuesday afternoon.

Since the family was already worried about Moffat, Macnab said that when an ambulance zipped past his father’s house in Sayward, he had a hunch it might be heading for Moffat and followed it. There were no obvious signs of the accident from the road, like broken trees, but a hunter had spotted the truck by chance and called 911, he said.

When Glen Moffat arrived at the “notorious” curve in the highway south of the village of Sayward where his son went off the road, he saw his own pickup truck, which his son had borrowed, about 12 metres down.

“You can imagine the thoughts that went through his mind originally, seeing his truck, his son had been gone for days, and now he finds him over the edge,” Macnab said.

The harrowing rescue took several hours, as rescuers needed hydraulic tools to cut away the driver’s side of the vehicle, Macnab said. Glen Moffat phoned family members from the scene and reported his son had survived.

“Everyone was just elated and beyond themselves,” Macnab said.

Moffat has had surgery on his broken femur and is recovering in stable condition from his other injuries, which also include bruised vertebrae in his back and a lacerated spleen and liver.

The entire family is grateful for the hunter, rescuers and doctors who helped save Moffat’s life, Macnab said.

“The whole system kicks in, in these situations, and it isn’t until you’re involved directly in it that you have an extreme, profound thankfulne­ss to these guys who go out there and do this kind of stuff,” he said.

Moffat’s grandfathe­r, Alex Moffat, said he’s a “very, very lucky boy” and described the hunter’s discovery of the wreckage as “one chance in a million.”

“The fact we found him alive was such a relief,” Macnab said. “He’s gotten a second chance at life.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FACEBOOK ?? Duncan Moffat is shown in a photo from the Facebook page “Missing: Duncan Moffat.” The 23-year-old Vancouver Island man is recovering in a Victoria hospital after being pinned in his truck with a broken femur for several days near Campbell River.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FACEBOOK Duncan Moffat is shown in a photo from the Facebook page “Missing: Duncan Moffat.” The 23-year-old Vancouver Island man is recovering in a Victoria hospital after being pinned in his truck with a broken femur for several days near Campbell River.

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