Snowmobile employed to deliver penicillin to sick child in Sandhills
LINCOLN — With snow drifts blocking local highways, residents of the Sandhills village of Cody were forced to use a snowmobile Friday to deliver penicillin to a sick child stuck at a local ranch.
After John Witt, the husband of a local doctor, was able to get the medicine to the ranching community west of Valentine, a local teen, Trapper Schied, 15, and his 12-year-old brother, Chase, drove their snowmobile 12 miles north of town to deliver the penicillin.
Six-year-old Zoey Johnson had been suffering from scarlet fever for the past three days but was snowed in at the family ranch, her grandfather, George Johnson said. Schied, he said, battled wind chills up to 30 below zero to reach the ranch.
“It’s incredible,” the elder Johnson said. “It was critical that she got antibiotics before it started spreading to her organs.”
Cherry County, and the northern portion of Nebraska’s Panhandle were hit hard by a blizzard that began on Dec. 13, with snowfall of up to 24 inches or more. This week, high winds drifted highways back shut, and bitterly cold temperatures hit the area.
The Nebraska Department of Transportation, facing a shortage of snowplow drivers across the state, deployed snow blowers from central Nebraska to the area to battle the initial storm. But those extra plows were gone by this week, leaving local crews to deal with wind gusts topped 40 mph and drifts again blocking roads.
At 4 p.m. Friday, the NDOT’s highway map showed several highways closed in the Valentine area, and in the Pine Ridge region of northwest Nebraska.
“It’s not a good situation for us,” said Dennis Connot, a NDOT maintenance supervisor out of Valentine as he drove a plow Friday afternoon to a stranded motorist on Nebraska Highway 97 southwest of town.
Connot said that one snowdrift, of between 8-10 feet tall, that had blocked the highway had been dug out twice in the past two days but had redrifted across the road again today.
He said the high winds that swept across Nebraska this week made conditions worse than when the initial snows came on the 13th and 14th. To complicate matters further, a couple of Connot’s snowplow drivers were sick on Friday.
“We found someone yesterday morning who was pretty cold out on Highway 12 who was stranded in a semi hauling hay,” Connot said. “He shouldn’t have been out.”
The Nebraska State Patrol reported Friday that its troopers had responded to more than 500 weather-related incidents during the wind storm and blistering cold temperatures on Wednesday and Thursday.
On Thursday evening, two motorists were rescued who had become stranded on a county road near the South Dakota border in rural Dawes County.
After attempts failed to reach them using track vehicles and plows, members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe Search and Rescue employed snowmobiles to rescue them, the State Patrol reported.
“I don’t ever remember it being this bad,” said Lisa Bellin, who works at the Valentine Livestock Auction.
Bellin said that her husband, who works as a plow driver, was stuck in a snowdrift in his rig on Highway 97 yesterday as he tried to reach a stranded motorist. She said she’d also heard about the penicillin run in Cody.
“This is something you would hear about in 1930s not in 2022,” Bellin said.
The livestock market cancelled sales the past two weeks due to the deep snow followed by this week’s high winds and bitter cold. Bellin said it’s hard telling whether ranchers will lose cattle because, in many cases, they can’t get to them due to the deep snow and blinding winds.
“You have to find them first. And you’ve got to be able to see them to get to them,” she said.
The State Patrol advises motorists who becomes stranded to stay in their vehicle and call for help. The Nebraska State Patrol Highway Helpline is available 24 hours per day by calling *55.
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