Logan seventh-grader taking it one step at a time

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Connor Alter looks like your typical, seventh-grade basketball player, full of energy and pep on the court for Princeton Logan Junior High.

Just eight months ago that scenario would not have been likely.

On Easter Sunday of this year, April 4, the Alters spent most of the day with their cousins at their grandparents house in Princeton. They later retreated back to the Alter’s to wind down after being on good behavior, according to Connor’s dad, Jay, and took a ride on their family’s Kawasaki Mule.

Minutes into the ride, disaster struck.

The Mule flipped, and the boys on the back were able to bail out to safety. Connor unsuccessfully tried to put his right foot out to try to keep the Mule upright, and it landed on top of his little cousin, Jordan Reinhardt, 4. Jordan’s brother, Jake, 14, and Connor immediately sprung into action and pulled the Mule off the little boy, while Jamie Reinhardt, 8, pulled Jordan out from underneath the vehicle, their quick actions potentially saving the boy’s life, at the very least from sustaining more serious injuries.

Connor’s right foot, however, was a mangled mess, crushed by the ATV and nearly severed, imbedded with grass and dirt. Somehow he managed to lift the ATV on one foot, which he now attributes to pure adrenaline.

Jay Alter knew his son’s foot was in bad shape the moment he saw it, reinforced by the look on the face of first responder Chuck Woolley. Jay remembers Connor telling him, “Dad, I’m not going to be able to play travel baseball because my foot is going to fall off.”

Jordan began to develop breathing complications and was diagnosed at the hospital with broken ribs and a punctured lung. Woolley had already called for a Life Flight helicopter at the scene of the accident for Connor, and Jordan would soon follow.

Jennifer and Jay Alter raced behind them on Route 26. They received a grim diagnosis of their eldest son’s condition and signed off on the documents for amputation as their son was taken into emergency surgery.

The Alters prayed for the best, but were prepared for the worst. The trauma surgeon said it was one of the dirtiest injuries he’s ever seen with debris all the way up to his knee. Infection post-surgery was a big concern.

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