BISMARCK, N.D. — A South African man who died due to a North Dakota wildfire over the weekend was planning to return to his wife within weeks in time for the birth of their first child.
Nicolaas van Eeden, 26, died Saturday due to smoke inhalation after he was driving home to Tioga when the smoke became too much, based on a state trooper's report, his wife, Anke, told The Associated Press. It's unclear exactly what happened, but the trooper found him alive and able to walk. However, he died soon after arriving in Williston by ambulance, she said.
Van Eeden was one of two people who died due to the weekend wildfires, blazes in scattered areas of western North Dakota that injured several other people and led to evacuations of more than 100 others.
''He was just an amazing person,'' Anke van Eeden said of her husband. ''And he absolutely adored everyone around him and cared for everyone, and I think the only thing keeping him going is the fact that he was so excited to meet his little girl.''
The couple's daughter is due in November. Anke learned of Nicolaas's death soon after her baby shower. They were married in February and had been together for three and a half years. They met through mutual friends.
They came to North Dakota together in late April. Nicolaas was doing general farm work on a Tioga-area ranch under an agricultural worker visa program ''to just give us a financial boost so we can start our lives,'' Anke said.
He was set to come home in three weeks for their baby's birth. Anke, 31, quit her job earlier this year to go to North Dakota with Nicolaas, who was the family's provider. She returned to George, South Africa, in early August.
The couple's last conversation was a routine phone call letting her know he was driving home, she said.