4x4 enthusiast turns 'hero' driving snowed-in health-care staff to work on Vancouver Island
Before he was known as Barto Built, sharing his backcountry 4x4 adventures on YouTube, Bart Sutherland was known as a "rock-crawler," driving his truck over seemingly insurmountable obstacles.
"All of a sudden your tires hook and over the top you go!" Bart says, before showing me a photo of him driving over an almost vertical rock face. "It almost makes you speechless!"
And then having a baby actually does. So Bart, now known as, "Dad," shifted gears.
But then, during a commute to support his family, Bart experienced the collision that changed his life.
"Basically [an RV] hit me so hard I was ejected from the vehicle," he says, showing me photos from the scene of the accident.
Bart has no memory of his truck being mangled, his body being mutilated, or his prognosis being bleak
"They prepared my wife and family for what would be very little quality of life," Bart says.
Yet, after waking from a coma after two weeks, Bart did recognize his baby boy.
"The first real memory I have is hugging him," Bart says.
While his son provided the motivation to keep going, Bart says what the health-care workers who saved his life provided is indescribable.
"It’s something I will never be able to reciprocate," he says.
More than eight years after the accident, Bart’s physical challenges and traumatic brain injury are manageable. But his mental health struggles are often overwhelming.
"I lost my career. I lost my ability to pick up my kids," Bart says fighting back tears. "The loss of self is something I’m still chasing."
But then, there was an unprecedented snowfall over the holidays, and Barto saw a call to help stranded health-care workers on social media.
It inspired this motor-head with a mullet to hit the road and be called a hero.
"They say, 'Not all heroes wear capes.' My response is, some grow them," Bart laughs, before running his hand through the long ginger hair growing past his shoulders. "This is my cape!"
Over nine days, Bart says he volunteered to drive more than 100 health-care staff to work, travelling 2,800 kilometres, and spending $1,000 of his own money on gas.
Afterwards, he came to a priceless realization.
"I finally recognized where my meaning and purpose is," Bart says, tears welling. "The meaning and purpose I have been desperately searching for [since the accident]."
Bart says he’s found that practicing kindness, being selfless, and giving back to the people who saved him is proving to be the 4x4 adventure of a lifetime.
"The extreme stuff would get you excited and get the blood going," Bart says. "But this got everything going. This made me feel whole."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Woman with disabilities approved for medically assisted death relocated thanks to 'inspiring' support
A 31-year-old disabled Toronto woman who was conditionally approved for a medically assisted death after a fruitless bid for safe housing says her life has been 'changed' by an outpouring of support after telling her story.

School police chief receives blame in Texas shooting response
The police official blamed for not sending officers in more quickly to stop the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting is the chief of the school system's small police force, a unit dedicated ordinarily to building relationships with students and responding to the occasional fight.
Russia takes small cities, aims to widen east Ukraine battle
Russia asserted Saturday that its troops and separatist fighters had captured a key railway junction in eastern Ukraine, the second small city to fall to Moscow's forces this week as they fought to seize all of the country's contested Donbas region.
Truth tracker: Does the World Economic Forum influence governments like Canada's?
The World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos was met with justifiable criticisms and unfounded conspiracy theories.
Calling social conservatives dinosaurs was 'wrong terminology', says Patrick Brown
Federal Conservative leadership candidate Patrick Brown says calling social conservatives 'dinosaurs' in a book he wrote about his time in Ontario politics was 'the wrong terminology.'
Fact check: NRA speakers distort gun and crime statistics
Speakers at the National Rifle Association annual meeting assailed a Chicago gun ban that doesn't exist, ignored security upgrades at the Texas school where children were slaughtered and roundly distorted national gun and crime statistics as they pushed back against any tightening of gun laws.
She smeared blood on herself and played dead: 11-year-old reveals chilling details of the massacre
An 11-year-old survivor of the Robb Elementary School massacre in Uvalde, Texas, feared the gunman would come back for her so she smeared herself in her friend's blood and played dead.
Quebec mosque shooter ruling could affect parole eligibility in other high-profile cases
The Supreme Court of Canada’s ruling allowing the Quebec City mosque shooter to be eligible for parole after 25 years is raising concern for more than a dozen similar cases.
Jury's duty in Depp-Heard trial doesn't track public debate
A seven-person civil jury in Virginia will resume deliberations Tuesday in Johnny Depp's libel trial against Amber Heard. What the jury considers will be very different from the public debate that has engulfed the high-profile proceedings.