It all happened so quickly. I didn't even hear anything...I just remember turning around and seeing him there in the water...arms frantically waving.... and then it was like someone turned up the volume and I heard him screaming for me.....it was surreal, like a nightmare.
We went with a church group up to Beaver Meadows Resort and Ranch (northwest of Ft. Collins) to do some fun winter activities. They had tubing, snow-shoeing, x-c skiing, ice skating, etc.
When we first got there, I saw lots of kids on the frozen pond sliding around. I knew that it was frozen solid because Mike, the guy who organized the trip, told me that they had told him it was 18 - 24" thick. So I wasn't worried. Tyler, Mike's son, asked me if I wanted him to take the kids over to the pond while I got us registered and paid for. I said sure.
My mother came with us and she was sitting in the lodge by the fire, which was really big and producing lots of warmth. I was standing there talking to her when Tyler brings the kids in and Evan is sobbing. I look down and he is soaked from mid-thigh down. Just soaked.
He apparently had been walking near the edge of the pond in an area that is shallow and fell through the ice. We calmed him down, took his wet clothes off (fortunately, I had brought an extra set) and hung his bibs and socks by the fire. He would need the bibs to go tubing.
Finally, everything was dry and we headed for the tubing hill. What fun! There was not much snow so the tubes were kind of slow but the kids had fun anyway.
Then it was time to go ice-skating. I love to skate and grew up skating on our pond in Kansas. Evan didn't want to skate but said he would walk around by the pond. Fine. That's when he fell through - AGAIN.
Only this time, it was worse. He fell in up to his chest! A group of teenagers heard him screaming and went to pull him out. I got there as they pulled him out and have never seen a child so upset. He was sobbing uncontrollably, as any child would be having fallen through the ice twice. But he could've slipped under easily and/or not be seen for awhile and as cold as the water was, he would've gotten hypothermia.
But it all turned out well. He's fine and now has a healthy dose of fear that will hopefully make him think twice about walking on thin ice again. But I will say this: it wasn't his fault, really. When Kurt went over to the area he was walking in, it looked like a snowy bank, not a part of the pond. I could see why he didn't know there was ice below him.
More soon...gotta sign off now but have more updates to write.
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4 years ago