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Higgins Family Rescued From New Mexico Snowdrift After 2 Days

Snowdrift

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN   12/21/11 09:53 PM ET   AP

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Rescuers on Wednesday pulled a Texas family from an SUV that had been buried in a snowdrift on a rural New Mexico highway for nearly two days.

State police said rescuers had to dig through 4 feet of ice and snow to free the Higgins family, whose red GMC Yukon got stuck on U.S. 56 near Springer when a blizzard moved through the area Monday.

Rescuers found David and Yvonne Higgins and their 5-year-old daughter Hannah clinging to each other and lethargic early Wednesday morning. The family is recovering at Miners Colfax Medical Center in Raton.

David Higgins told The Associated Press he and his wife both have pneumonia but his daughter is fine. He said he was glad to be able to talk about his ordeal because he had feared that he and his family might not be found.

"By 9 or 10 Monday night, I realized there was solid snow outside my window. I tried to shove my arm through the top of the window. I thought it can't be that deep," the 48-year-old father said. "I pushed as hard as I could. My arm went about 16 inches and there was still snow."

The family, who had left their home near League City, Texas, on Sunday for a ski trip at Angel Fire in northern New Mexico, started to hit bad weather soon after they crossed the state line into New Mexico on Monday afternoon.

They had checked road conditions. Difficult driving was reported but the road was still open. They followed a snowplow for a while, but visibility dropped to zero.

"It was white. You couldn't even see the yellow line," David said.

It was getting so bad that he had slowed to about 5 mph.

"You're thinking there are these people from Colorado and New Mexico behind us going, `Those Texas drivers, they don't know how to drive in this snow,'" he said. "Then I'm thinking to myself, `How can they drive in this?' You can't even see."

Despite having snow tires on their SUV, the snow stopped the family in their tracks. David Higgins tried backing up and then driving forward again. He made some progress but then the back end slipped around and the vehicle started to slide down an embankment.

He was able to keep the car running for a couple of hours, but when he went to get out to clear the exhaust pipe, his door was blocked.

Early on, the family could hear vehicles passing, so they tried honking the horn. That didn't work.

The Higginses had their ski gear, plenty of water to drink, sandwiches, chips and Chex mix. But as the hours passed, it seems as if they were working harder to breathe inside the buried SUV.

"We weren't sure of it, but we think we were running out of air. That was spooky," he said.

Higgins was able to reach his brother in Texas by cellphone and let him know the family's general location. The distress call was relayed to state police, which launched a search for the family Tuesday evening.

The National Guard was called out, along with state transportation workers. State highway trucks with plows and rescuers in four-wheel-drive vehicles pushed through heavy snow and drifts as high as 10 feet as teams probed the snow looking for the family's SUV.

One of the rescuers hit the hood, and the digging started.

Higgins said rescuers had to break the window to get to him and his family.

"They pulled us up and out of it," he said. "The rescuer took pictures and it looked like a rabbit hole. We were 3 to 4 feet above the vehicle."

The Higginses were among 32 vehicles state police and guardsmen rescued from the storm, but they were the only ones who police say needed medical attention.

"Tired and whooped" is how Higgins described his family after their ordeal.

They had a steady stream of visitors at the hospital Wednesday as state police officers and rescue workers came to check on them.

Higgins' parents were on their way to New Mexico on Wednesday night to help the couple. Whether they would make it home in time for Christmas was still unclear, since Higgins said his wife still wasn't feeling up to a long trip.

He was able to joke that a ski vacation was definitely out this year, but he wouldn't mind taking his family on a cross-country trip next summer – when there's no chance of it snowing. He said his daughter loves to go camping and there are plenty of places he and his wife have yet to see.

Playing games on their cellphones and watching movies on his daughter's travel DVD player helped pass the time, but Higgins admits the thought of not making it out alive started to cross his mind after a day of being buried.

"We didn't realize how deep the snow was," he said.

Higgins had a simple message for travelers this winter: Throw a case of water and a sleeping bag in the car.

"It will be there if you need it," he said. "I could see if we weren't half as prepared as we were, it could have been a worse outcome."

___

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Rescuers on Wednesday pulled a Texas family from an SUV that had been buried in a snowdrift on a rural New Mexico highway for nearly two days. State police said rescuers had to d...
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Rescuers on Wednesday pulled a Texas family from an SUV that had been buried in a snowdrift on a rural New Mexico highway for nearly two days. State police said rescuers had to d...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madcityy
03:16 PM on 12/25/2011
WOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
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08:39 PM on 12/24/2011
I don't like to speak disrespectfully of folks from Texas but, hey, come on.

Wouldn't any normal person in this situation, either.

Immediately exit his vehicle well before he was snowed in, walk up to the highway were passing cars could be heard, and flag somebody down to get some help?

Or.

Immediately use his cell phone to report his situation to State Police or some other authority, or call a tow truck?

What, in God's name, was his plan?

Wait for spring?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
californiananc
My kittens do my typing.
04:54 PM on 12/24/2011
I bet they would have planned better if they had known what they were going to go through. Think back folks on how some of your lives might have turned out differently if you were able to see in the future. Many people make trips to the snow. I'm glad they are safe,and had a cell phone with a charged battery that worked under snow. What's the name of that cell phone provider by the way?
04:19 PM on 12/24/2011
a small shovel or large hunting knife might also have come in handy to cut through the packed snow at least to admit some air...
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08:42 PM on 12/24/2011
Yeah, or else a brain might have helped because then he would have reported his situation to the State police immediately instead of waiting for two friggin days. What was he waiting for, spring?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jokamachi
03:42 PM on 12/24/2011
And you had better believe that they were praying for God's help on this one. Can't just sit there like an ethically challenged atheist and hope the void will save you.
11:25 PM on 12/24/2011
Isn't praying an expression of hope?
11:53 AM on 12/24/2011
Bet next time they go out in a convertabile
11:53 AM on 12/24/2011
The engine heat would have melted the snow over the hood.
01:12 PM on 12/24/2011
Did you miss the part when he said he couldn't get out of the car to clear the snow from the exhaust pipe. If he had ran the engine under those condidtions they would all be dead.
04:46 PM on 12/24/2011
Also the car would stall and not run at all if the tail pipe was covered by the snow.
I have family in the southern part of NM and they called and told me that they were staying home due to the forecast of heavy snow and bad conditions and they don't even live in the area that was hit hardest. Since you can get 7 days of weather that is usually fairly close on, oh well some people just don't think at all. Glad that the child appears to be ok.
03:44 PM on 12/24/2011
If you have ever been in a real snow strom u would know that the snow comes down so hard it starts to melt on the hood then starts to freeze and the snow just piles on. next thing you know u are buried
11:50 AM on 12/24/2011
Are they the new Donners?
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Just Don
"Just", like "merely"
11:19 AM on 12/24/2011
"Family Buried Alive by Four Feet of Snow"

Wouldn't be much of a story if it said "Dead" instead of alive. Really, who writes these headlines? With this headline, I'd assume that they ended up dead. Crap, here I go again being rude. Sorry.
10:56 AM on 12/24/2011
What a miracle!!! Thank God for cell phones, the emergency equipment we have today and the dedication of our rescue teams!!!!
04:24 PM on 12/24/2011
cell phones also have GPS as long as they are on and functioning...
04:47 PM on 12/24/2011
That would only work if there was good coverage in that area of the state...I personally know that there is not. so all the cell phones and GPS equipment in the world would not have helped out in this case.
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Louie Rey
10:27 AM on 12/24/2011
Well, at least we know what these people should get for Christmas, a clue. Yeah, there's a monstrous blizzard on the way so let's drive for several hours in it just so that we can slide down a mountain on the snow. Whoopee! Idiots. Oh well, at least they didn't perish. Hopefully they'll realize how lucky they were and never put themselves in s similar situation again.
04:28 PM on 12/24/2011
obviously you don't know much about winter weather in snow prone areas--I've traveled thousands of miles, by car, in blizzard conditions...but I traveled prepared for getting stuck or snowed in--food, water, medical kit, tools, chains, flashlights...
04:48 PM on 12/24/2011
I lived in Alaska for several years and carried about twice as much stuff for weather problems then you list.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
californiananc
My kittens do my typing.
04:57 PM on 12/24/2011
Give it up. Too many snow experts on here. If we were all prepared for the natural disasters thrown our way, many news outlets would be out of business.
10:06 AM on 12/24/2011
Another non-story about well off fools driving in conditions like this for a stupid ski trip.
10:03 AM on 12/24/2011
Why would they just sit there & let the snow cover them up?! That's BULL$H!T!! They should have left them there until the Spring Thaw, just for purposelu trying to be a huge pain in the Rescue workers @$$e$!!! The rest of the world, who gets snow every winter on a regular basis, knows that a snow DRIFT does not dump on a car like a dump truck full of snow all at once & suddenly bury & immobilize you!!
The Rescuers should have dug out just to the top of the widows, to let them get some air, & slip in some water & food, ....& drag out the rest of the process, as long as it took for the sun to melt the snow away until they could open their own car doors!!!! See how soon anyone pulls THAT BULL$H1T AGAIN!!!!
When it is snowing, you don't hop in the car & go some where,....unless you are very accusomed to driving in the snow, & even then, you are taking your chances. If you are driving & it starts snowing,...you don't park & wait for it to bury you!!! Even if you do stop, you can & should get out & knock the snow off of you car & kick it away from your car as much as you can.
Although I am sure the piled up snow acted like an Igloo & insulated them from the cold temperatures.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kaki40
Independent
04:19 PM on 12/24/2011
ummm guess you missed the part that they slid of an embankment, they did not park...arnt you just an angry one..
09:50 AM on 12/24/2011
I'm from New Mexico and snows like the one in this story are pretty unusual. We do get snow but nothing like what we've seen this week. When people go out in this type of weather, unless there is a really good reason to be in it, they are not only putting themselves in danger but rescue people as well. Was a ski trip that important with all the warnings about the heavy snow we were experiencing?
There are weather reports for a reason, people. Heed them!
04:31 PM on 12/24/2011
maybe they didn't get the weather warning in Texas..
04:51 PM on 12/24/2011
That is crap...I live in Hawaii and watch national media news and I saw it and I also went on line to check it out as I have family near the area invovled. They were just plain foolish and did not prepare for possibility of emergency. I lived in Alaska for several years and I learned fast as soon as I moved there. Did not go out at anytime of year without checking weather conditions for 24 hours and always had enough supplies...food, clothing, medication, etc. to last 4 days in the car.
09:46 AM on 12/24/2011
this is one of them situations that easily could have resulted in three dead. they were real fortunate. the boy and his dog that fell in the river in canada was not so fortunate. one never knows when their number will come up on the screen of life and death. this family was very fortunate.