![How 2 Canadians fought to survive the Taiwan earthquake](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7168402.1712686072!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/taiwan-earthquake-couple.jpg)
How 2 Canadians fought to survive the Taiwan earthquake
CBC
A week after an earthquake in Taiwan killed 13 people and injured more than 1,000, a Canadian couple are nursing their injuries and recounting their own tale of survival.
Lelia Lemay of Montreal and her boyfriend Brandon Iwanyshyn of Edmonton were hiking April 3 in the Taroko Gorge, in a national park on the eastern part of the island, when the magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck.
It should have been a magical week of vacation for the couple who work at an international school in Dalian, China.
Taroko National Park, a popular hiking destination about 25 kilometres northwest of the hard-hit city of Hualien, had been the perfect setting to celebrate Lemay's 34th birthday on April 4.
The couple set out early, at 7:15 a.m., to beat the arrival of tourist buses on what Lemay said was "a perfect day."
"The gorge was turquoise; the sky was blue," she told Radio-Canada in French Tuesday, in a video interview from a Hualien hospital.
At 7:58 a.m., as they hiked alone, the ground suddenly began to shake, triggering landslides all around them. Both were hit by falling rocks.
Lemay recalls falling to the ground from the impact and trying to protect her head.
"I just said to myself: 'There you go, it's April 3rd. Tomorrow I'm supposed to turn 34 but I won't. It all ends now.'"
In a state of shock, the couple ran to take cover near a mini-power plant. They tried to get in, but it was locked.
"The last thing I remember is us being on all fours and trying to protect ourselves," said Iwanyshyn, who did his interview in English. "We hid behind this little wall."
Both were seriously injured. Lemay had numerous cuts and would later learn she had fractured vertebrae. Brandon suffered a compound fracture to his skull and broke his foot. "Brandon told me, 'I'm OK.... I'm fine.'" Lemay said. "But I had seen his cut; I knew it wasn't fine. I didn't want us to spend the night." With almost no food or water and constant aftershocks, they decided it was best to keep moving. They were helped by the fact that Iwanyshyn had kept notes, tracking time and travel co-ordinates.
"We knew that both of us had injuries, but we said to ourselves: Can we walk? Yes. So let's do it."
They provided their loved ones with their locations before losing cell reception, then decided to follow the river out, as the rocks didn't seem to reach it, Iwanyshyn said. They eventually arrived at a spot on the trail that normally sells food and souvenirs and found 10 other survivors.