Found missing hikers after over a month in Snow Canada
Found missing hikers after over a month in Snow Canada
It started on a normal Tuesday morning for two men who were on the way to work in the remote areas of British-Colombia, Canada when they discovered another man who came out of the wilderness. In him, they recognized the missing hiker Sam Benastick, who had been missing since October 19, the Northern Rockies of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
discovery of the missing hiker
Benastick was found on a dirt road, supporting himself with two walking aids and wrapped a cut sleeping bag around his legs to keep warm. After a 10-day camping trip in Redfern-Keily Park, he had not returned home on October 17th and was then reported as missing, reported the CNN offshoot CBC News.
survival story of Sam Benastick
Benastick told the police that he had stayed in his car for a few days before moving to a stream near a mountain, where he camped for another 10 to 15 days. Then he pulled down into the valley and built a shelter in a dry stream bed, where he met the two workers who found him.
a happy outcome
The men brought Benastick to a local hospital where the police confirmed his identity. "Finding Sam alive is the absolutely best that could happen. After all the time he was missing, there was fear that this would not be the result," said CPL Madonna Saunderson from BC RCMP Communications.
The emotional support of the family
his parents and brother stayed during the extensive search for their son for more than 20 days in the Buffalo Inn in Pink Mountain, British Colombia. The managing director of the Inns, Mike Reid, said CNN that he made some free meals available to the family during her stay. "I have three children and five grandchildren. So I know what you went through," he said.
reunification and health situation
Reid stayed in touch with the family, which was reunited with Benastick in the hospital. They told him that their son almost collapsed when the two workers found him on the street and supported himself with two sticks because he was "so weak". "He was in a pretty bad condition, but he lives," Reid told Cnn.
search actions and use of volunteers
According to the RCMP, several rescue and rescue teams together with the Canadian rangers and "many local volunteers with a comprehensive knowledge of the remote area" searched for Benastick. His uncle, Al Benastick, described his nephew as a passionate nature lover who suffered from "frostbite and some smoke inhalation". It was "a little incredible" that his nephew survived, he said. "Imagine being out there in so many cold, so long."
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