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N.B. man ‘happy to be alive’ after nearly being impaled in driving accident

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New Brunswick

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One man’s commute home became one he will remember for the rest of his life.

Pickup truck pierced by bridge piece in crash on remote logging road

Sam Farley · CBC News

·

A beam through the seat of a truck

When Michael Roy’s pickup crashed on a snowy drive home through a logging road, a wooden bridge beam went right through the front of the truck and into the driver’s seat, pushing Roy up and tearing his pants. (Submitted by Michael Roy)

After a long night shift on Jan.10, Michael Roy hopped into his pickup truck with a co-worker and started the long drive home. 

The ride could have been his last.

Roy, 32, often took a rural logging road for the 100-kilometre drive from the job site in Plaster Rock to his home in Saint-Quentin. 

Snow was heavy through the desolate woodland trail known locally as the West Tobique Wood Road.

“We didn’t see much and we didn’t go fast,” Roy said.

Halfway through the drive, just as they were approaching a sharp turn over a bridge, Roy said his steering began to malfunction.

WATCH | Could you survive this? Michael Roy did: 

An inch away from being impaled

Michael Roy is lucky to be alive after he lost control of his vehicle in a snowstorm and crashed into a bridge on a remote logging road in northwest New Brunswick.

He said he lost control of the wheel and hit the brakes just as his truck slid through the bridge and into a ditch.

After the crash, Roy turned to his co-worker.

“I told him I’m happy to be alive, and he didn’t know why.”

Roy told him to turn on his flashlight, and the crash scene was revealed.

A truck hanging off a bridge.

Roy’s truck slid through the bridge and into a ditch. (Submitted by Michael Roy)

A thick wooden beam from the bridge had pierced through the front body of the truck, into the cabin, and through the very seat Roy was sitting on.

“When it entered the truck, it hit my seat just enough to lift me a little bit,” Roy said, adding that it even ripped his pants.

“I’m glad that it wasn’t an inch over because I would not be here to talk with you.”

He said he and his co-worker were both in disbelief that Roy was still alive — the pair walked away without injury.

Pants with a big hole

Roy was left unharmed after the accident, but the wooden beam tore through his pants. (Submitted by Michael Roy)

“Just a little bruise and maybe two or three scratches. That’s all I got,” Roy said.

When he finally made it home safely, Roy’s wife was shocked.

“My wife can’t believe it until I showed her the pictures, and she can’t believe it until I went with them the day after to the scrapyard to see the truck in person.”

Roy said he didn’t call police about the crash because it took place on a road through private land.

A google maps showing the two towns

Roy was driving about 100 kilometres home to Saint-Quentin from a job site in Plaster Rock, both small communities in northwestern New Brunswick. (Google Maps)

“The towing just went there and removed the truck from the bridge and towed it to the scrapyard,” he said

The truck was totalled, but Roy was not — making him a bit of a local wonder in Saint-Quentin, which has around 2,000 residents.

“Every time I go to the mall or the grocery, everyone tells me that they can’t believe I’m still alive,” Roy said.

Despite going through a near-death experience, Roy said he’s not nervous to get behind the wheel again.

Michael Roy smiles for a photo

Roy says he’s been operating heavy equipment for seven years and he’s not worried about getting behind the wheel again. (Submitted by Michael Roy)

“I know it’s because it’s mechanical issues, it’s not my skill that’s involved,” he said, adding that he’s worked as a heavy equipment operator for seven years and during those years, drove in his fair share of winter storms. 

“I didn’t think that something like that could possibly happen to me,” Roy said.

“But now, I see that you never know when it’s your time.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sam Farley is a Fredericton-based reporter at CBC New Brunswick. Originally from Boston, he is a journalism graduate of the University of King’s College in Halifax. He can be reached at sam.farley@cbc.ca

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