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Saskatchewan couple survives being buried in B.C. mudslide

Click to play video: 'Clean up of B.C. mudslide that covered couple’s car in Kootenay Pass'
Clean up of B.C. mudslide that covered couple’s car in Kootenay Pass
WATCH ABOVE: Images of the mudslide in the Kootenay Pass near Creston, B.C., that swept a Saskatchewan couple's car off Highway 3 on the May long weekend – May 22, 2018

A Saskatchewan couple is recovering in hospital after a mudslide swept them off a cliff in British Columbia.

Weyburn resident Sheri Niemegeers said she and her boyfriend, Gabe Rosescu, of Regina were nearing their destination of Nelson, B.C., when disaster struck.

“We were driving down the road and we were pretty excited because we weren’t far from where our destination was. And all of a sudden we both were like, holy heck, there’s a tree. And then bang, that’s the last thing I remember,” she said.

The car tumbled down the side of a cliff in a mess of trees, mud and debris.

“The next thing I knew, we were suspended somehow in the trees,” she said.

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Rosescu was barely conscious and breathing heavily, she said. Niemegeers convinced him that they had to escape through his window, since “it was straight down,” through hers.

Gabe Rosescu and Sheri Niemegeers are shown in a handout photo from the GoFundMe page called “Support for Gabe and Sheri.” The Canadian Press / HO-GoFundMe

Niemegeers tried to make a call, but there was no reception, she said. They reached a ledge, where she started assessing their injuries – she had a “smashed” ankle, while he was bleeding from his head and face.

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Luckily, she remembered to grab her medication for Addison’s disease, which affects her adrenal glands, and took the moment to inject herself.

“Without that I probably wouldn’t have survived because my body can’t handle adrenaline,” she said.

WATCH: Vernon couple recalls the story of a mudslide hitting their house

Click to play video: 'Vernon couple recalls the story of a mudslide hitting their house'
Vernon couple recalls the story of a mudslide hitting their house

That’s when help arrived.

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“All of a sudden we heard a vehicle and heard some voices, so we started screaming for some help,” she said.

“Between that and getting to the top, there’s not much I remember.”

The first person to arrive at the mudslide was a firefighter from Lloydminster, Alta., who recognized the danger, said Rosescu’s brother-in-law Don Struthers.

The firefighter reached out to the family following the incident, desperate for information about the couple he helped rescue.

Struthers said the firefighter and his passenger stopped traffic one kilometre back, before approaching the mudslide to see if anyone was hurt.

“All of a sudden they heard a voice crying out, it happened to be Gabe. They said they were pretty much chest-deep in mud and trees and branches,” Struthers said.

Struthers said the couple was lucky that a pileup of trees stopped the vehicle from tumbling all the way down the cliff.

Rosescu was airlifted to a Kelowna, B.C., hospital, where he is recovering with head injuries, including some bleeding in the brain and a broken orbital bone.

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Doctors are waiting until swelling goes down before scheduling a surgery, he said.

“I guess they are cautiously optimistic that things will keep improving,” Struthers said.

Niemegeers was taken to a hospital in Trail, B.C., and is being treated for a broken sternum and ankle.

Struthers said Rosescu is a sales rep and Niemegeers works for an oil-field company in northern Saskatchewan.

Niemegeers said the accident happened on their six-month anniversary.

She has spoken with Rosescu and said he is OK.

“Looking back now, it’s hard to believe that we made it through,” she said. “It’s hard to believe we’re alive today and that our injuries aren’t worse than what they could be. It was just unbelievable.”

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