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Woman rescued from Gorge Waterway by hero who climbed down trestle

Police are calling a Victoria man a hero after he climbed down the Selkirk Trestle to rescue a woman in distress who had jumped into the Gorge Waterway Wednesday night.
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Devin Waugh, who lives in the Railyards, says he was walking along the Selkirk Trestle about 9:30 p.m. Wednesday when he heard a woman yelling and then saw her jump from the trestle into the cold water below. ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST

Police are calling a Victoria man a hero after he climbed down the Selkirk Trestle to rescue a woman in distress who had jumped into the Gorge Waterway Wednesday night.

Devin Waugh, who lives in the Railyards, said he was walking along the trestle around 9:30 p.m. when he heard a woman yelling and then saw her jump from the trestle into the cold water below.

A nearby cyclist called 911 and shone his light on the water as Waugh spoke to the woman and told her to swim to the wooden piling and hang on.

“She was clearly extremely distressed,” said Waugh, 31. The woman went back and forth between hanging onto the piling and pushing off into the open water.

“I made the call to climb down the side of the trestle down to the water level,” said Waugh, who used his rock-climbing experience to navigate the wooden pilings.

Waugh crouched on one of the crossbeams between the pilings and grabbed the woman’s hand. He spoke to the woman, who was wearing only a nightgown, and reassured her that everything was going to be OK.

“I said: ‘Hey my name is Devin, I’m here to help you,’ ” Waugh recalled.

She pushed back into the water a few times, but Waugh encouraged her to swim to him under the bridge. Eventually she did, and he was able to pull her up onto the crossbeam.

Waugh said he’s not a strong swimmer, so he’s glad he could help the woman while staying on the crossbeam. Fortunately, it was high tide, with the water less than a metre from the crossbeam, so he could pull her up easily, he said.

“I don’t think she knew where she was or what was going on. I said: ‘It’s OK, I’m going to stay with you,’ ” Waugh said.

“Occasionally she’d have a lucid moment, she’d say: ‘OK, don’t let go.’ ”

Waugh stayed with the woman until a Victoria Fire Department boat arrived. Deputy Fire Chief Dan Atkinson said the fire boat was at the scene about 10 minutes after the initial call at 9:30 p.m.

Firefighters wrapped blankets around the woman, who was shivering from the cold water, but not physically injured. The boat took the woman to a dock near Glo Restaurant, where police and B.C. Ambulance paramedics were waiting.

Paramedics and Victoria police officers escorted the woman to hospital under the Mental Health Act.

“He’s a hero,” said Victoria police spokesman Const. Cam MacIntyre. “We are thankful Devin was in the right place at the right time, and did an incredibly brave thing in a potentially life-threatening situation.”

Waugh, who works as an Indigenous land-use consultant, said he didn’t think twice about taking action — it was all instinct.

“She clearly needed help.”

Anyone in distress can call the Vancouver Island Crisis line at 1‑888‑494‑3888 or text 250-800-3806 from a mobile phone between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. seven days a week.

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