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B.C. man finally home after month-long Diamond Princess, U.S. quarantine ordeal

WATCH: A Fort Langley man is back on Canadian soil after spending nearly a month in quarantine - in a cruise ship and at a U.S. military base - after being exposed to the COVID-19 coronavirus. Grace Ke reports – Mar 4, 2020

It’s been nearly a month since Spencer Fehrenbacher’s quarantine ordeal started aboard the COVID-19-riddled Diamond Princess cruise ship in Yokohama, Japan and the Fort Langley man is finally home.

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Fehrenbacher arrived at Vancouver International Airport on Wednesday with his father Scott, who had travelled down to California to retrieve him from Travis Air Force Base.

“It finally feels like I can relax. It feels like a really large weight has been lifted off my shoulders,” said Fehrenbacher.

“The constant fear that at any point I might go from being one of the non-infected to one of the infected, and the slightest tingle in the back of my throat could be that indicator.

“Every day, going through my day self-analyzing and questioning.”

While Fehrenbacher is a Canadian permanent resident, he remains a U.S. citizen, which is why he was repatriated on a U.S. flight to California.

He said he had one scary moment upon arriving at the base.

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“Once we landed, somebody up the front of the plane in a hazmat suit said, ‘excuse me is, Mrs. Such-and-Such’ on the plane,” said Fehrenbacher, adding that the woman was sitting directly behind him.

“Another person walked up to her and said, ‘Excuse me, ma’am, you and your husband are staying on the plane, you’ll both be going on to Omaha, Nebraksa.'”

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Fehrenbacher later learned everyone flying to Omaha had tested positive for the virus.

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Arriving at the base was only the halfway point of Fehrenbacher’s ordeal.

He had to spend another two weeks in quarantine before he could leave, the sight of bunny-suit clad Centre for Disease Control (CDC) staff going from surreal to normal.

“At first it was scary, you’d only seen them in movies before,” he said.

“It’s weird how desensitized we’ve become to it. We see people walking around in full hazmat suits and it doesn’t strike us as unordinary any more, it’s just kind of routine.”

Fehrenbacher was released Monday, and his father was there to pick him up.

“Up to that last minute when the bus came through we were still holding our breaths,” said Scott.

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“I jumped out of my car — I don’t think I even closed the door — ran up to him and gave him a big hug. I don’t have a problem saying I cried a bit.

“You may remember on Monday, President Trump actually tweeted that he would consider closing borders. That doesn’t feel good when you’re out of the country, so we wanted to get back here right away.”

Now, back in Canada, Fehrenbacher said he plans to head to the pub to have a celebration beer with family and friends.

He told Global News he’s learned two lessons over the course of the ordeal: the value of being close to the ones you love, and empathizing with others.

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“Do I think some things [with the cruise quarantine] could have been done better? Absolutely,” he said.
“But Just understanding that there is value in being empathetic to those people [handling the crisis] who are in those difficult positions.”
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His father said the situation has made him realize just how important public health is.

“When it comes to public health borders are meaningless, and it’s all up to us to have the responsibility to protect each other,” he siad.

“I’m proud of British Columbia; they’re way ahead on this. And it feels good to be back here.”

— With files from Grace Ke

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