Michelle Salt survived motorcycle crash to para-snowboard in Sochi - Action News
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Michelle Salt survived motorcycle crash to para-snowboard in Sochi

Calgarian Michelle Salt will compete in the first-ever para-snowboarding event this week in Sochi. It was a goal set by the 29-year-old just weeks after surviving a near fatal motorcycle crash in 2011.

Calgarian lost her right leg after near fatal 2011 crash

Michelle Salt rises to Paralympic challenge

11 years ago
Duration 2:06
Calgary's Michelle Salt nearly died in a motorcycle crash but is now competing in the Paralympics.

Calgarian Michelle Salt will compete in thefirst-ever para-snowboarding event this week in Sochi.

It was a goal set by the 29-year-old just weeks after surviving a near fatal motorcycle crash in 2011.

  • Video journalist Terri Trembath travelled to Sylvan Lake to speak with Salt's little sister and mother. As she shows us in the video above, nobody is more proud than her family.
  • Athlete profile | Michelle Salt
Calgary's Michelle Salt will compete at the 2014 Sochi Paralympic Games in the sport's debut appearance. (Michelle Salt/Facebook)

Claire Vrolyk has no shortage of pictures of her big sister Michelle in her home.

She remembers going snowboarding with her only seven months after the accident.

"I was just really worried about her falling because she was being held together by pins and rods in her back and I was a little bit like, You're crazy," said Vrolyk.

Salt lost her right leg in theJune 27 crash near Cochrane, a community west of Calgary.

The accident left her with13 broken bones and on life support.

Light bulb moment

A week after the accident things took a turn for the better, saidVrolyk.

We started talking about you could be in the Paralympics and right awaya light bulb in her head," she said.

That conversation motivated Salt to get to a point where she could get back on her snowboard. It took five major surgeries and four months of rehab to make that goal possible.

Two-and-a-half years later, and the Salt'sinSochi.

Her mother Dominique Vrolyk says she is notsurprised by her daughter's success, but wishes she could be there.

"It happened really fast and the cost of the airfare alone was a bit daunting and I had to make a decision to stay behind, said Dominique. It was pretty upsetting."

While Michelle is on her own at the Paralympics, everyone back home is cheering her on.

"I just keep telling her either way we're proud of her because I think she's starting to get a little bit nervous, said Claire. Like, Oh my gosh, I'm here and you know so many people are thinking bring home the gold and I think she's starting to get a little like, Don't say that! I'm going to just try my best.