4 minute read

Unstoppable

Motivational speaker and Paralympic champion snowboarder Tyler Turner rides on

BY COLEMAN MOLNAR  KAYLEEN VANDERREE Freelance journalist, digital marketer and part-time associate producer at CBC Radio in Kamloops, B.C. Find Coleman in the gym, on the court or on the mountain.

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Tyler Turner is your typical ‘B.C. Boy.’ Raised in the western province, he fell early and hard for the area’s rare combination of winter and summer sports, transitioning seamlessly from a youth of outdoor recreation to an adulthood funded by the mountains and skies. As a 20-something, he made a living when the grass was green instructing skydiving or working on the golf course or local brewery. When it snowed, he’d relocate and work at a ski hill. Simply put, he was living the B.C. Boy’s dream.

That dream nearly came to a tragic end when Turner suffered a catastrophic skydiving accident. Like a page torn from the middle of a book, the 60-second period that forever changed his life is missing from his memory.

“We honestly don't know what happened,” he says of the fateful landing. “It was probably a lot of factors, definitely a mistake. There could have been some environmental factors too, but it’s five-anda-half years later and I still don't know. I made a conscious choice in the hospital to give up trying to figure it out, but I still really wish I knew what happened.”

After days in a coma, Turner came to and took stock of his body for the first time: his right leg was gone, his left leg “essentially blown to pieces…like shattered glass.” He had multiple spinal cord fractures, a broken pelvis, traumatic brain injuries, broken teeth, and he’d bitten through his tongue.

Over the next two years and one day, Turner worked tirelessly on his recovery with the experts at the GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre in Vancouver. Some 18 months in, with treatment of his left leg yielding poor results, he decided to amputate.

“That was a choice to make my life better, and I was sure of it,” he says. “I had my right leg as a reference. It had a prosthetic, everything including my pelvis was healing, I was going to be able to walk, but my left leg was going to keep me in a wheelchair for the rest of my life. It was the best day of my life going into that surgery... best day of my life coming out. I was so happy. The nurses were confused, but I was like let's get life going here.”

After grinding through months more of recovery and struggling to unhook the claws that the opiate-based medication had sunk into his psyche, Turner finally returned to his passions, starting with the very same one that claimed his legs.

“I got back in the sky pretty quick and that was a massive boost,” he says. “I got that community back, you know. There were so many things checked off the list immediately. I mean, I was just safely getting out, safely floating down with my friends and that was good, but I knew there was room for progression there.”

Next came the return to surfing, with the help of friends there to push him onto his first wave. Turner knew, on the other hand, that with the unavoidable shock to the prosthetics, getting back on a snowboard would be even tougher. The idea was to hold hands with his friend and ease down the hill for the first run, maybe hit the bar afterward, but they hadn’t slid four feet before Turner released his friend’s hands and took off. “I was doing 70 km/h down the hill, wide open, riding like the day before I lost my legs.”

It didn’t take long for word to spread of the double amputee with an unstoppable urge to shred, and soon Turner found himself competing in, and winning, snowboarding competitions. “My first ever

race was the World Cup during extreme Covid times and we pulled it off and I won,” he says, recalling his 2021 trip to Italy. “So, I think I turned some heads.”

The next season, he turned thousands more, taking home two gold medals and a bronze at the 2022 World Para Snow Sports Championships in the men’s team event, snowboard cross and banked slalom, respectively. Then followed up his performances just over a month later with Paralympic gold in snowboard cross and bronze in banked slalom. The B.C. Boy was officially back doing B.C. things, this time at an elite, international level.

Now 34 years old, Turner has also been sharing his inspirational journey via a non-profit organization called the High Fives Foundation in an effort to help other injured athletes. “I just want to continue being a part of that and getting adaptive athletes, people who've been injured, out doing athletics and trying new things,” he says. “It's pretty cool to be able to see the excitement of people who thought they lost everything or thought they'd never do their thing, and get them back in the water surfing or back on a mountain bike, or fly fishing or sit skiing or whatever they do.”

When he’s not travelling for competitions, Turner and his partner live on their sailboat, currently anchored off the coast of Mexico. Relaxing, perhaps momentarily, but Turner’s goals and challenges remain lofty, with the 2026 Olympic run fast approaching. There’s little doubt where he’ll settle after all the travel and competition has run its course, though. You can take the boy out of B.C.…

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