12-Year Old Girl Tries to Help Save Boy Who Spent Nearly 20 Minutes Underwater
- Posted on August 10, 2011 at 10:18pm by
Tiffany Gabbay
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LONG BEACH, Wash. (The Blaze/AP) — Charles Ostrander’s head hung back lifelessly as he was carried out of the frigid Pacific, 15 minutes or more after a riptide sucked in the 12-year-old. Today, he’s alive. How?
You could say prayers. There were many along the beach late last week as his body bobbed limply just below the ocean’s surface. But there was also a team of volunteer rescuers, the medics who performed CPR well after all seemed lost, and another 12-year-old who risked her own life to help him before anyone else could.
And there was the ocean itself. At 56 degrees, the water was cold enough that it may have bought rescuers a little time.
The boy, who goes by his nickname, Dale, has spoken a few words since his ordeal and was moved out of intensive care Wednesday. It‘s unclear whether he’ll fully recover, but his parents, Chad and Kirsten, have hope.
“There’s been several miracles just in the circumstances of finding him, the fact that he’s not dead, the fact that he can move, the fact that he can speak,” Chad Ostrander said. “Unbelievable.”
Dale was visiting the southwest Washington coast with members of his church youth group Friday when the ocean’s strong currents pulled him and another boy far from shore. They were just wading, not swimming, his father said.
“A riptide hit them, kind of knocked them off their feet,” said Shanon Kissel, a sawmill worker who was boogie boarding in a shallow area nearby with his daughter, Nicole.
Nicole took off after Dale on her boogie board, even though her father was yelling that she was going into a dangerous area.
“She didn’t hear me. She just kept going after Dale,” Kissel said.
The boy, dressed in a long-sleeve shirt and pants, struggled onto Nicole’s three-foot boogie-board. The pair paddled ferociously toward shore as the rip current pulled them even farther from it.
Nicole said Dale told her, “Keep paddling. We’re almost there.”
“He told me his name, how old he was,” she said. “I said a bad word and he said, `God doesn’t like that.’”
Shanon Kissel said he reached the other boy – who was not identified – and pulled him onto his own board. He yelled at bystanders to call 911 and went to call for help himself.
When Kissel got back in the water he saw Nicole and Dale clinging to her board, turned sideways in rolling waves about 150 feet beyond the crashing surf. He was swimming out to the children when a wave knocked the pair off her board.
“She turns around to face him like she’s gonna go back after him,” Kissel said. “I had to tell her to get back on the board.”
She did, but Ostrander had disappeared.
Fire officials and other rescuers arrived. Some stood atop trucks, using binoculars to try to locate the boy. Members of Dale’s church group cried and prayed, kneeling in the sand.
Eddie Mendez, a volunteer water rescuer, was working his day job at a construction site when the emergency call came in. The 34-year-old immediately drove over to the beach and changed into a wet suit while his colleague launched two jet skis.
Mendez said he saw a shadow moving under the breaking water offshore, so he and a diver rushed over. They scanned the area for a few minutes before Mendez spotted the shadow again. They found the boy floating about two feet below the surface of the water.
“He was white-pale and face down,” Mendez said.
As they pulled the boy on board, Mendez realized he was rescuing a child – about the age of his own daughter.
“I thought, `Wow, this is like my own child,’” Mendez said.
Mendez drove the boy to the beach, where emergency responders began trying to revive him. There was no sign of life but they kept performing CPR as they transported him. Finally, after Dale reached a nearby hospital, his pulse returned.
Then Dale was flown from the southwest Washington coast to OHSU Doernbecher Children’s Hospital in Portland, Ore. His parents were still steeling themselves for the worst.
“I expected to say our goodbyes and so did my wife, and we were just prepared for that,” Chad Ostrander said. But on Sunday night, as he was eased off sedatives, Dale opened his eyes.
“At that moment, that was the first glimmer of any hope,” his father said. “It didn’t mean he was going to make it. It just meant that there was hope.”
Generally, the chances of surviving a near-drowning increase when a person is young, the water is cold and the time spent underwater is short. There are documented accounts of people who were revived after being submerged in colder water for up to an hour.
Dr. Mark Morocco, an emergency room doctor at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, said the fact that Dale was wearing long sleeves probably also helped. He also said it didn’t appear the boy was underwater the whole time after he was swept away.
It is not clear how long the boy was actually underwater. Mendez said about 15 minutes elapsed between the time rescuers were dispatched and the time Dale was pulled from the ocean.
Morocco, who was not involved in Dale’s care, said swift treatment was key. He credited rescuers for continuing resuscitation efforts even though the boy lacked a pulse and reflexes.
“When this kid came out of the surf, he looked dead,” he said. “But you have to ignore the fact that he looks dead” and give CPR.
Dale starting talking on Monday. When his parents encouraged him to cough to clear his throat, he replied, “I don’t have to.”
Doctors have cautioned his parents that even if Dale survives, he could have permanent brain damage.
The physicians “were very clear that he had been under for too long, had been without oxygen for too long,” Kirsten Ostrander said. “We trust (God) no matter what.”
Dale will need speech and physical therapy, and can’t get out of his hospital bed yet, his father said.
“Things are going along better than anyone expected so at this point we’re very happy,” he said.
“Honestly, all of the doctors’ prospects are very negative. They’re very honest and blunt. But they said every once in a while there’s a miracle, and we don’t want to give up on that,” Ostrander said.
Dale has uttered a few more words. Ostrander said that when he told him he couldn’t get out of bed, “He reared up and said, `Yes, I can.’”
Two more words came Wednesday, when Nicole Kissel visited him.
She said he seemed to have trouble focusing his eyes for most of the 15-minute reunion. But as she left, he made eye contact for the first time and said, “Thank you.”
AP provides the first video of the 12-year-old boy immersed in the Pacific Ocean before he was rescued is amazing his family:
MSNBC provides the next video:





















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Comments (37)
mattmo79
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 9:25amBrave little girl, hopefully things will work out in the end for the boy.
Report Post »SouthGA
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 9:15amA guy I was stationed with in the Navy had a heart attack at home and he said he was dead for 45 minutes before getting to the hospital. The ER doctor wanted to pronounce him dead but the EMT‘s wouldn’t give up and 2 minutes later they brought him back. He regained full function and is no different than before the heart attack. He is very religious and does have a weird sense of humor about it. He wore a shirt that said “Death, been there done that”.
This boy will recover fully.
Report Post »bigfatslob
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 8:53amWell, where’s da social justice in this story…HELLO. It be only bout white folk.
Report Post »Hisemiester
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 11:15amGet a life slob. Or is that Blubber butt?
Report Post »displaced
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 7:50pmSlob, we all know that Black folk don’t go to da beach!!
Report Post »bigdaddyt46
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 6:08amHALLELUEAH!!!! Thank You God for once again showing your divine mercy and love by sending your servants to save one of your children. Thank You also for giving this 12 year old girl the courage needed to risk her life and safety to help at a crucial time like this. AMEN
Report Post »Marylou7
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 5:04amThank you Jesus! Thank you Nicole Kissel for being brave and putting others before yourself.
Report Post »Diane TX
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 3:43amI hope that he’s able to return to full capacity. It doesn’t seem certain about how long he was oxygen deprived.
Report Post »OneofMany
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 3:06amPrayers to Jesus given in Faith move mountains!
Report Post »BarbWire
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 2:38amThank you, God. Please, continue to help this boy get better, Lord.
Report Post »Parnell3rd
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 2:26amHero seams to be an understatement for this young lady. GOD blessed them both and my prayers go to the young man as he recovers.
Report Post »sweetcerise
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 2:17amPraise Be! God truly works miracles!
Report Post »Ron_WA
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 2:14amWhere did the story on the TEA party being terrorists go? As of 22:15 Pacific it was there but as of 22:45 Pacific it was gone – what’s up w/ that????
Report Post »cookcountypatriot
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 1:54amthank you jesus…praise our lord!,,,he uses us to strengthen our faith…that little girl is as blessed as the little boy an all who winessed it..those boys will live
Report Post »hogtrashhd
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 1:09amGod has blessed this child and the child who helped save him.. tears of thankfulness.. God does work in mysterious ways..
Report Post »banjarmon
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 12:50amJesus is alive and still working miracles. What more do you need for Proof?
Report Post »loriann12
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 6:35amYes, God is still in the miracle business.
Report Post »Cove30
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 12:55pmI hope Jesus visits the Somalian children soon,
Report Post »Ducky 1
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 12:31amTo God be the glory on this one!!!
Report Post »Ron_WA
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 12:15amNever doubt the power of prayer, the indomitable human spirit & the miracles Faith can provide.
Report Post »abbygirl1994
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 11:18pmA 12 year old a hero! God is showing us that there a many who are willing to give their own lives to save another.. what a inspiration! God bless them all!
Report Post »godlovinmom
Posted on August 11, 2011 at 12:46amThis brought tears to my eyes…Brave girl indeed…Right on Nicole…my prayers are with Dale and his family….may God continue to have mercy on this boy!
Report Post »kenny d from Suffolk
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 11:12pmThank you, Lord! Thank you, Jesus! Prayer is an amazing thing!
Report Post »GodsPuppet
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 11:02pmGod heard the prayers, sent his rescuers quickly, this is wonderful and all of those who prayed for his safe return will remember that God heard and answered them. Bless this family and son.
Report Post »mikenleeds
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 11:00pmGod provides miracle for ones that believes in him
Report Post »I Love Howie Carr
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 10:55pmAbsolutely amazing, That little girl deserves a medal. I wouldn’t have been as brave at that age.
Report Post »dontbotherme
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 10:51pmPraise be to God! God bless all those who had a hand in saving this child, from the little girl, to those kneeling in prayer, to all of the rescue workers. I pray that Dale fully recuperates. He seems strong willed. That’s a good thing!
Report Post »Carol Ingian
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 10:43pmI hope Dale recovers fully. We will remember him in our prayers.
Report Post »jb.kibs
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 10:30pmpraise be to God.
Report Post »Psychosis
Posted on August 10, 2011 at 10:24pmnow that is American Spirit
strangers doing everything they can to help each other
glad to see that some escape the brainwashing of todays progressives and education system
someone is watching over that boy
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