Story copied from the Vancouver Sun
Resting in the comfort of his Kamloops home Thursday night, CN engineer
Earl McGrail recalled the horror earlier in the day when his locomotive
struck a massive rock slide and plunged nearly 60 metres into the canyon
of the Thompson River near Lytton.
"Your worst nightmare," the 49-year-old told The Vancouver Sun, trying
to find words to describe his ordeal. "It's a ride from hell."
McGrail, who was the engineer on train 355 with conductor Hans Nederpel,
said he knows every part of the track from Jasper to Vancouver and that
it was immediately clear something was wrong when he saw a rock pile on
the tracks ahead.
"You memorize every curve and it's like, 'wait a second, this doesn't
exist,'" the 29-year railway veteran said, recalling his initial
reaction to the massive pile of debris.
"It was huge," he said of the pile on the tracks about 1.5 kilometres
east of Lytton, at the western end of what is known locally as White
Canyon. "It was a monster slide."
At about 1:05 a.m. -- close to an hour after an earlier train had safely
cleared the same tracks -- McGrail's westbound freight train hit the
debris pile and careened towards the canyon.
McGrail said engine 2687 -- the first of two locomotives on the 105-car
train, and the one he and Nederpel were in -- went off the rails and
almost stopped, before going over the cliff.
"We hit the slide and we just about stopped and then we teetered over
the edge," he said.
All he could think about was that he wasn't ready to die. "I'm not
ready. Point blank, I'm not ready," he recalled thinking. "I'll do
whatever I can to get out of this and to help my fellow worker," he
added.
The ride to the bottom was so fast he could not recall details but he
said they were both being tossed around the cab.
McGrail said one of the first things he did before the engine went over
was to cut the main power switch in case the engine landed in the river.
"The main generator pumps out enough electricity for a small city," he
said. "If we hit the water and that's activated we're done."
After plunging over the cliff, the engine came to rest on its side about
30 metres from the Thompson, leaving McGrail and Nederpel shaken, but
not badly injured.
For Nederpel, 56, the terrifying slide seemed to happen in slow motion.
"It only took seconds, but it seemed like hours," he said in an
interview.
He was sitting beside McGrail when they saw the rock slide as the
locomotive rounded a curve in the Lasha siding, but it was too late to
stop the train.
"We saw the rocks on the track and put on the emergency brake but there
wasn't enough time. We hit the slide and it pushed us over the side.
"We had no idea where we were going, it was pitch dark."
Nederpel pulled himself out of his seat and stood up behind it, bracing
himself as the engine slid down the canyon wall. At some point the
engine flopped over and the two were thrown against the side of the cab.
"It wasn't until we got out that we realized how far we had fallen," he
said.
They were still in radio contact with the Kamloops depot and gave them
details of the accident. Then they broke a window and scrambled out of
the engine, but that was far from the end of their ordeal. They tried
to climb but the canyon wall was too steep and muddy. "It was impossible
for us to get out." Nederpel said. When they heard rocks crashing down
and hitting the engine they were concerned another slide would occur,
and when they saw the second engine hanging above them on the lip of the
canyon they decided to walk downstream, away from the wreck, in case
more of the train came down.
Meanwhile, back on the canyon lip, police, firefighters and paramedics
had responded to the crash within about 20 minutes, but quickly realized
they had no way to safely mount a rescue on their own. McGrail and
Nederpel would have to wait by the river until a specialized rescue team
could arrive.
Food, hot drinks and blankets were send down to them in a carrier
lowered by rope and they set up camp less than a kilometre west of the
wreck. "It wasn't that cold, we had jackets and blankets, in fact we
felt pretty good," Nederpel said. "We both realized how lucky we were
and that kept us pretty happy during the night."
For Nederpel, a CN conductor for 30 years, it was his first derailment.
Of his night under the stars McGrail said: "We hunkered down, we were
there for a few hours -- it was good. It was interesting, a lot of
meteorites," he said, pointing out how much more he appreciated life
after coming so close to death. McGrail added his gratitude for the
rescuers, and those at CN who were there to help when he needed it most.
"I can't thank the management from CN enough," he said. "They were there
the whole time.... They did everything right."
While McGrail and Nederpel were huddling over a thermos of hot chocolate
at the bottom of canyon, Kent Harrison Search and Rescue team president
Nick Morley was getting a call at his home in Agassiz, asking him to
assemble a team and help with the rescue. Three hours after hearing
about the derailment at about 6 a.m., Morley was on the scene with four
other search and rescue specialists, rigging ropes and starting his
descent down the bank to McGrail and Nederpel. "It was pretty steep,"
Morley said in an interview.
He said that when he reached McGrail and Nederpel they were in good
spirits, but extremely eager to leave. "They were pretty anxious to get
out," he said. "They were tired and cold. They just wanted to get home."
Morley said he gave the two men harnesses and helmets and that by about
8 a.m. they were both out of the canyon and being treated by ambulance
attendants at the top of the embankment.
They were taken to hospital and released within hours with only minor
injuries to return to their families in Kamloops.
Meanwhile, CN crews worked to assess the damage and deal with the diesel
fuel and other fluids leaking from the locomotive. "There was a
hairline crack in one of the fuel tanks and we're estimating a loss of
about 600 litres of diesel, which is contained in the immediate area,"
CN spokesman Jim Feeny said Thursday afternoon. Feeny said there also
was a leak from a hydraulic fluid line, and that about 400 litres of
fluid had spilled, with some possibly going into the Thompson River.
"Some of the hydraulic [fluid] may have made it into the river but it is
a very light product and will stay on top until it is broken up," he
said.
Feeny said cleanup crews were on the scene Thursday but that it was too
early to determine when everything would be cleared.
Back in Kamloops, McGrail said Thursday night he is thankful to be alive
and eager to get back to work. "We made it. That's the best part of the
story right there," he said. "The best part is we both walked out and we
didn't lose any limbs."