KAMIAH, Idaho. - A North Idaho woman's drive along the Lochsa River earlier this month turned into a nightmare after she was impaled through her neck by a tree limb. Twenty-year-old Michelle Childers and her husband, 22-year-old Daniel Childers, were taking a recreational drive along the Lochsa River on September 5. Michelle says they had driven down a dead end road and were on their way back out when the unimaginable happened. Michelle remembers sitting in the passenger seat of the couple's truck turned toward her husband. She says she was talking, laughing and just enjoying "the beautiful day it was turning out to be." Michelle says she doesn't exactly know what happened next, but somehow a limb from a spruce tree came through the passenger window and impaled her neck. She could feel a "strange" pressure on her neck and shoulder as her husband started to panic. "I asked him 'what? where is it?,'" said Michelle. Her husband answered, "it's in your neck." Michelle remembers "thinking, praying and hoping" for a miracle as her husband tried to drive to get her medical attention. About an hour after the limb went into her neck, the couple finally arrived at Lochsa Lodge near the Idaho/Montana border. Daniel ran inside where he asked to use the phone. Before he could even get back to the truck, Michelle heard the words "we have a nurse." Michelle says the woman, Kelly, a nurse practitioner from Spokane was able to get a 'life flight' helicopter and ambulance headed to the lodge. That's when Paula, a registered nurse from St. Patrick Hospital in Missoula, along with her husband started talking to Michelle attempting to calm her down. "Something about this amazing couple made me feel like I was really going to be ok. I believed her when she said you're going to be just fine," said Michelle. "So here I am sitting in a pick-up with all these wonderful people around me and a 13-inch Spruce limb with branches coming off it in still in my neck." The 'life flight' helicopter arrived on scene and after the flight to St. Patrick Hospital, Michelle went into surgery for six hours to remove the limb from her neck. Michelle says the doctor's did an amazing job and she is currently recovering at home. Source
A bit shifty there how a tree branch suddenly went through a windshield...sure speeding got nothing to do with this?
wow, that's just nasty... She better hope no seeds are left in her body, don't want a tree growing in her body like the other story.
I think you've been watching too much Sci-Fi, LOL... -bigsmiles Seriously, she was lucky to have had two miracles. The first was that the thing impaled her but didn't sever or crush anything critically important (like one of her jugular veins or carotid arteries). Then in the middle of nowhere, have a health care professional that was able to quickly assess, take charge, and stabilize the situation, including communicating the extreme urgency of her needs to get a medivac helicopter dispatched to the scene. I agree, this was a good story. The thing didn't go through a windshield: "Michelle says she doesn't exactly know what happened next, but somehow a limb from a spruce tree came through the passenger window and impaled her neck." It was, in her words, "a beautiful day," so she likely had her window rolled down and a low branch probably protruded into the opened window as the car rolled by. Had her window been closed, the branch may have just skimmed off the surface of the glass instead.
i hope the husband checked that the branch wasn't attached to the tree first before driving off to find medical attention