Dog Rescues Boy, 12, Buried by Avalanche for an Hour

Simon Veazey
By Simon Veazey
December 28, 2018World News
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Dog Rescues Boy, 12, Buried by Avalanche for an Hour
Gétro, a male malinois trained in mountain rescue, who helped find a 12-year-old trapped in the snow at La Plagne in the French Alps on Dec. 26, 2018. (Gendarmerie de la Savoie)

A 12-year-old boy was found alive after being buried by an avalanche in the Alps for over an hour.

The local rescuers, who are used to pulling frozen lifeless bodies from the snow if they are not found within 15 minutes, said finding the London schoolboy, woozy from breathing his own carbon dioxide, but still conscious, was a “miracle.”

The boy, named only as Hector in local reports, was skiing on an unauthorized slope in La Plagne in the French Alps on Boxing day with his father and others when they were hit by an avalanche.

He was swept several hundred meters down the slope, according to local reports, surviving the 1 meter depth due to small cracks that allowed air to reach him.

When he heard that the boy was missing, and the group was not equipped with locator beacons, local rescuer Sergeant-Major Raphael Chovin said his heart sank.

Only few people survive beyond fifteen minutes—and without a locator beacon, a shovel or other survival gear, the chances are even slimmer.

But one hour and three minutes later, his specially trained dog, Gétro, found the boy.

Chovin said Hector was still conscious and able to speak when they dug him out.

“He had not inhaled snow and had no snow plugs in his mouth,” Chovin told Le Matin. “He was in shock. He was both restless and sleepy—partially intoxicated because he breathed the carbon dioxide he had expelled.”

He was buried under a heap of small snow blocks, said Chovin. “Cracks let the air through. That’s why he held out for 1 minute 3 seconds under the snow. In theory, 15 minutes is the maximum survival time.”

“He was also very lucky not to have been injured during his fall. He could have hit rocks or been crushed by the forces.”

According to the BBC, the boy was French, but attends school in London.

The boy will be monitored at a local hospital for signs of necrosis due to freezing of the tissues in the snow.

From The Epoch Times

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