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Montana animal control and firefighter save horse stranded in frozen canal in 7-hour rescue

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MARION, Mont. — Marion Firefighters and the Flathead County Animal Control jumped to the rescue Monday night, saving a horse that had broken through the ice and was stranded in a swampy canal.

Marion Fire District Fire Chief Katie Mast said the rescue mission took close to seven hours to complete.

“We had to break a lot of ice and some dirt to get to him and then his front legs kept kind of going under the ice," Mast said. "We finally got the front part of his body out, and then his rear legs would go underneath the ice buildup, so we kind of had to build a bridge across and lift him straight up."

Mast said more than 20 volunteers, including neighbors and community members, helped rescue the horse, named Henry.

While in the water, Mast said the horse suffered from severe fatigue, dehydration, and hypothermia.

With little use of his legs, the horse stayed overnight in the fire hall Monday, receiving warm fluids.

She said firefighters were in freezing water for hours to make sure the horse survived.

Henry is currently making a full recovery at a veterinarian clinic in Kalispell and is expected to be released back to his owner on Thursday.

This story was originally published by Sean Wells on KPAX in MIssoula, Montana.