B.C. woman wades through her flooded home to retrieve late grandmother's opal ring
CBC
When Sharlotte Skowronek was forced to evacuate her Princeton, B.C., home amid severe flooding, she left behind a family heirloom, her grandmother's opal ring.
Her grandmother had worn it for as long as she could remember. It was first passed to Skowronek's aunt, then to Skowronek, and, eventually, the plan was for it to go to her daughter.
After the flood, the street outside her house had turned into a river.
So Skowronek had to wait, not knowing whether she would ever find the ring again — until last week, when Skowronek was startled awake at 6 a.m. by a phone call from her friend, Nicki Forde.
The flooding had receded and the street was clear, aside from the waist-high mud.
"If we gear up and find some rubber boots, you and I are going to be able to find that ring," Skowronek remembers Forde telling her.
She jumped out of bed and met her friend.
It was the first time Skowronek had been back in her house since the flood. Her home was filled with murky water.
"It was just a little overwhelming at first, but we knew we were going to find it," said Skowronek, adding they spent two hours wading through the muck.
Then, she saw something shimmer through the mud by the side of her bed.
On hands and knees, she reached in and found her grandmother's ring: a bright, speckled opal on a gold band, with intricate detailing around the stone.
She slid it in on her finger, the colours danced in contrast against her muddied hands.
"Nicki, I found it," she remembers yelling.
"I was so happy and so excited I just started crying. And she started crying."