Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

The Canadian Press Darpan, 29 Aug, 2014 10:57 AM
    WINNIPEG - A Winnipeg man who was lost in the wild for three days says he survived on rain water and all-dressed chips.
     
    Christopher Cloutier was camping with friends in Nopiming Provincial Park in southeastern Manitoba when they got separated.
     
    He decided to try to walk to their launching point, but got turned around.
     
    Cloutier’s friends reported him missing on Sunday when they returned to their campsite and couldn’t find him.
     
    Search and rescue crews searched for him on foot, by boat and by air, but didn’t find him.
     
    On Tuesday, he found his way to a road and flagged down a passing vehicle; he says the relief he felt was overwhelming.
     
    “I had in my backpack just two pairs of jeans, a sweater and a T-shirt, a bottle of water and a bag of chips and some socks. That’s all I had," Cloutier said Thursday.
     
    The 24-year-old was able to start fires with a lighter and birch tree bark and branches.
     
    “I really like the show Survivor Man and I actually got a lot of tips off that, like smoke signals and stuff.”
     
    Cloutier says he was afraid at times, particularly at night. His worst fear was running into a wolf.
     
    “The worst I think it got was when I would try to sleep, off in the distance you would hear branches getting broken down by I guess bears or moose because there are lots of moose out there. But I didn’t see any,” he said.
     
    Hours before he was rescued, Cloutier was injured.
     
    “I was trying to climb up this steep rock, except it’s so wet. Especially with the shoes I was wearing — they were just little skateboarding shoes so they don’t have much grip on them.
     
    So I just slipped and I tried catching my balance except just the momentum of my leg going and the weight of me, it just buckled underneath me and I thought my leg was broken for sure,” he said.
     
    He said he couldn't believe it when he saw a vehicle on the third day.
     
    “I said, 'Can you take me to a store? I need to get food, I need to get water and I need to grab some smokes. I didn’t see anybody for three days and just seeing somebody — when you’re walking down that trail and seeing somebody coming around that corner in a vehicle, you know it’s over at that point. It’s just overwhelming a little bit, eh? ”

    MORE National ARTICLES

    ICBC Seeks 5.2% Raise in Basic Insurance Rates

    ICBC Seeks 5.2% Raise in Basic Insurance Rates
    The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia is aiming to hike basic insurance rates by 5.2 per cent.

    ICBC Seeks 5.2% Raise in Basic Insurance Rates

    Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013

    Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013
    The number of cougars destroyed by conservation officers in B.C. in the 2013-2014 fiscal year jumped dramatically compared with a year earlier.

    Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013

    Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million

    Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million
    Pulp and bank note producer Fortress Paper Ltd. is selling its operations that make security film used in bank notes to Nanotech Security Corp. for up to $17.5 million in cash and shares.

    Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million

    Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms

    Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms
    Secondary schools in Vancouver are expected to be behind picket lines this week as part of a province-wide attempt to pressure the British Columbia government.

    Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms

    Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse

    Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse
    Police in western Manitoba have charged a couple with confining, starving and sexually abusing their children.

    Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse

    Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence

    Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence
    The Quebec government has called a public inquiry into the fire that killed 32 people at a seniors' residence last January.

    Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence