‘Scared the heck out of me’: Falling fish smashes Sask. woman’s windshield

Windwhistler
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‘Scared the heck out of me’: Falling fish smashes Sask. woman’s windshield

SaskatchewanOf all the things that could smash a car’s windshield in Saskatchewan, a fish that fell from the sky is pretty low on the list of likely suspects. But that’s what happened to Marie Ahlstrom when she was driving home on Sept. 19 near Turtle Lake, Sask., about 200 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon.Main suspect is bird that dropped its preyHannah Scott · CBC News · Posted: Oct 15, 2025 7:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 1 hour agoAt first, Marie Ahlstrom thought a rock had hit her windshield, but upon closer inspection, she discovered it had been a fish. (Submitted by Marie Ahlstrom)Of all the things that could smash a car’s windshield in Saskatchewan, a fish that fell from the sky is pretty low on the list of likely suspects.But that’s what happened to Marie Ahlstrom when she was driving home on Sept. 19 near Turtle Lake, Sask., about 200 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon.“You could actually see the impression of the fish scales in the windshield,” said Ahlstrom, who was unharmed.She initially assumed a rock had hit the car, but when she saw the blood, she said she knew it had to be something else. Then when Ahlstrom got home, she and her husband were able to assess the damage and find what remained of the fish.The fish had damaged the windshield as well as the side mirror of the car. Ahlstrom said there was some confusion when she tried to make the wildlife collision claim under her insurance, with one adjustor telling her fish isn�’t wildlife, but that it got sorted out.Ahlstrom said falling fish are not common, but she has heard of it before in the Turtle Lake area.She said birds in the area, particularly osprey, are known to occasionally scoop up fish too heavy for them to carry, causing them to drop the fish.“You could find a fish in your yard, and a good friend of ours a few years ago found one in the eavestroughing of his house,” Ahlstrom said.CBC News asked Trevor Herriot, a prairie naturalist and author, what he thought.“It has to have been an eagle,” he said. “There is nobody else except for ospreys that do that kind of fishing … but most ospreys have migrated south by now. There might be a few left, but I’d say odds are that it was a bald eagle.”Bald eagles are known to be excellent fishers, commonly swooping down to lake surfaces and catching fish with their talons. (Ken Dumont/CBC)Herriot said the only other possible explanation would be a water spout from the lake, a phenomenon that has been known to occasionally pick up fish and throw them great distances . But he said that possibility is highly unlikely, given the weather at the time of the incident.Whatever the cause, Ahlstrom found some humour in the situation.“I don’t know if it was wildlife or an act of God or an act of fear,” she said, “but something dropped that fish and scared the heck out of me.”LISTEN | Turtle Lake woman had surprise of her life when a fish hit her windshield:The Morning Edition – Sask4:20Turtle Lake women had the surprise of her life when a fish shattered her windshieldMarie Ahlstrom from Turtle Lake was driving home from a friend’s house, when a fish suddenly fell from the sky and smashed her windshield. Her insurance was hesitant to cover the costs due to fish not being considered wildlife in their policies.ABOUT THE AUTHORHannah Scott is a journalist with CBC Saskatchewan. She has a bachelor’s degree in Indigenous journalism from the First Nations University of Canada, and is currently working towards a bachelor’s in Indigenous Studies. Hannah can be reached at hannah.scott@cbc.ca

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