Advertisement

Dashcam video captures Alberta driver hitting 600-pound moose at highway speed

Click to play video: 'Edmonton driver hits 600-pound moose on Alberta highway'
Edmonton driver hits 600-pound moose on Alberta highway
WATCH ABOVE: Dashcam video captures man hitting moose on Alberta highway. WARNING: video may be disturbing to some viewers – Dec 14, 2017

An Edmonton man says he’s thankful to be alive after he ran into a moose at full highway speed while driving home from work late last month.

Ralph Brodt was working in the Whitecourt area on Nov. 23. Early in the evening, he started his journey back home to Edmonton in the dark. He was heading south on Highway 43, just past Mayerthorpe, when out of nowhere, a moose came walking onto the road.

“I just saw something white out of the corner of my eye. I didn’t even have time to react, it happened that fast,” Brodt said Thursday. “The next thing, glass was all over me and I was getting out of my car,” he said.

READ MORE: Moose kisses caught on camera after licking warning in Kananaskis

An off-duty police officer was driving behind Brodt at the time. The officer somehow managed to swerve to avoid the animal. She pulled over and drove Brodt to hospital in Stony Plain.

Story continues below advertisement

“She told me, ‘I don’t know how you survived that incident,'” Brodt recalled. “She saw the moose come out of the ditch and run in front of my car. I hit the moose, I didn’t even have time to hit my taillights.”

WATCH: Moose on the loose in south Edmonton

Brodt believes the moose was about two years old and weighed between 600 and 650 pounds. He captured the whole thing on his dashcam — the incident took less than two seconds.

“I was very, very fortunate,” he said. “Even the police officers in the Mayerthorpe area, when they were looking at the footage of it, they told me I was incredibly luckily to be alive. I’m very thankful to be alive… angels were looking after me that day.

“If it had been a bull moose, you and I probably wouldn’t be having this conversation.”

Brodt’s car was totalled, but he walked away without a scratch.

Brodt said he’s been driving for 45 years and has never hit an animal. He said police arrived at the scene shortly after the crash to find the moose was dead.

Sponsored content

AdChoices