Dramatic horse rescue near Saskatoon - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:54 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
SaskatoonVideo

Dramatic horse rescue near Saskatoon

Daisy is one lucky draft horse after being safely extricated from a well.

Tow truck used to pull horse pulled from well

Dramatic horse rescue near Saskatoon

9 years ago
Duration 1:57
Daisy the horse rescued from a well near Saskatoon. A tow truck was used to pull the animal from the hole.

Daisy is one lucky draft horse.

On Wednesday, Russ Thiessen's children were out feeding their horses on their land outside Martensville, Sask.

When Daisy didn't show up for her feed, the children started getting worried.

Daisy's owner, Russ Thiessen, isn't sure how his horse ended up backing up into a well. (Brad's Towing/ Facebook)
Eventually, they found her. Somehow, the Daisy had backed into a well, leaving only her head and front hoofs sticking out of the ground.

"It was like, this is so unreal. Is this actually possible?" Thiessen recalled.

Thiessen frantically called neighbours, a tow truck and a local veterinarian. After two hours and a lot of lifting, the horse was safely extricated from the well.

Dr. Jesse Vargo saidDaisy seems to have made a full recovery. The veterinarian had been worried about internal injuries the horse had been trapped in the hole for hours but it appears Daisy suffered no serious harm.

Figuring out how to safely pull the horse out of the well was challenging, Vargo said, adding he was glad Daisy remained relatively calm.

"She wasn't sedated at all," he said. "We had just given her pain meds, because she was so calm."

Brad Stratychuk said this was the third horse rescue he's seen in more than 30 years in the tow truck business. (Brad's Towing/Facebook)
The incident was nothing new for tow truck owner Brad Stratychuk, who said it was the third horse rescue he's seen in more than 30 years of operation.

It can be a bizarre business, Stratychuk said.

"We get some very strange calls," he said. "When the conservation officer called us to haul a moose out of the city, I thought that was pretty odd, too."

Thiessen saidhe had no idea there was a well or homestead on the property.

If everything goes well, Daisy will be able to return to her regular job, pulling local children around on sleigh rides when winter arrives.