
A snow plow driver in Canada is getting sick and tired of being nice. Heeler Healer, a YouTuber up north (@heelerhealer7552), is at home loving on his several heeler pups when he’s not busy plowing mountain roads. Before plowing, he’s known for politely asking people to move their cars (you know, in proper Canadian fashion). If they don’t move, he tends to bury them.
In a recent video he posted to his channel, the owner of a Ford F-150 parked in a particularly dangerous spot. It concerned the snow plow driver enough to ask him several times to move the truck, worried other drivers would crash into it.
“I asked this guy several times not to park here,” he told his nearly 4,000 subscribers. “He’s parked at the crest of a hill around a corner, and people come up and go around him, which has created a berm. Even I can barely get around him.”
So, the driver employed his trusty plowing skills
Using the powerful truck and its huge bucket, he moved the berm the truck driver created and pushed it closer to the truck. Not only does this make it easier for other drivers to navigate the icy roads, it’ll teach the driver a lesson.
Since, you know, he’ll have to dig his way out of that parking spot to leave. Being the Canadian he is, he made sure to leave the truck unscathed.
“Before you all come crying to me, nothing touches the bumper,” he said, zooming in on the trapped truck. “I don’t want anyone being a big crybaby about me touching their truck with snow. But it’s okay for them to cause a major hazard in one of the stupidest spots possible when there’s parking everywhere else.”
So far, his view has 2.3 million views and counting. It’s currently his most popular video.
Viewers say justice was served
Over 2,000 commenters were impressed with how nice the snow plow driver was and noted the truck driver was lucky. Often, they can be a lot meaner.
“Rule No. 1 in snow country: Do NO piss off the plow driver,” wrote a viewer.
Another wrote that the plow driver was simply doing him a favor.
“You just protected his truck with a barrier of snow from potential cars that come around the corner!” their comment read.
Another plow driver said he enacted the same sweet, sweet revenge on a selfish driver.
“I plowed at my job for years and had a coworker that would park in my way. I talked to him about it. Then management. He kept doing it. The boss said I could deal with it,” they said. “The next time was his last. He told me it took him 5 hours to dig it out. I buried it completely 4 feet over the cab.”