Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two Kids From U.S. Rescued After Spending Night Alone On Burke Mountain In Coquitlam

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2019 07:12 PM

    COQUITLAM, B.C. — After getting lost hiking and spending the night alone on steep terrain, two kids have been rescued Monday morning from Burke Mountain in Coquitlam, B.C.


    Search and Rescue search manager Ian MacDonald said a father who went hiking with his seven-year-old son and a six-year-old daughter — visitors from Georgia, United States — got off course and ended up slipping down a creek bed.


    The father and kids were trying to get to Munro Lake to do some fishing but didn't know the area too well, MacDonald said at a news conference Monday.


    "At some point the kids took a bit of a fall and the dad thought this was a dangerous situation," MacDonald said.


    The father asked the kids to stay put while he made a difficult trek of about two kilometres over very steep rugged terrain with no trails and through dense forest until he could call for help, he said.


    Search and Rescue got a call around 7 p.m. Sunday evening and had 12 people from Coquitlam, North Shore and Maple Ridge searching the area overnight, he said. The team also used a helicopter, drone and police dog to aid the effort.


    "It is a miracle," MacDonald said.


    The father spent the night at a hospital but the children have no injuries, MacDonald said.


    He said over the years the team has conducted multiple rescues in the same area because it tends to funnel people down.


    "It starts off quite gentle up at the top and then the lower you go, it gets into very steep terrain and waterfalls."


    MacDonald said search and rescuers followed a "trail of bread crumbs" finding a backpack and shoes that the father lost along the way.


    He commended the kids who stayed put where the father had left them.


    "Search and rescue is difficult enough without having a moving target so the kids did a great job," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Green Party Targets Use Of Tax Money For Political Attack Billboards

    VANCOUVER — Green party Leader Andrew Weaver is calling for a ban on the use of taxpayer money for political attack ads after the B.C. Liberals bought billboards blaming Premier John Horgan for a spike in gas prices.

    Green Party Targets Use Of Tax Money For Political Attack Billboards

    Small Cessna Plane That Crashed Carried Crew Contracted By BC Wildfire Service

    Small Cessna Plane That Crashed Carried Crew Contracted By BC Wildfire Service
    SMITHERS, B.C. — Three men who died in a small plane crash northeast of Smithers, B.C., on Saturday were part of a crew contracted by the BC Wildfire Service to do aerial imaging.

    Small Cessna Plane That Crashed Carried Crew Contracted By BC Wildfire Service

    Feds Fund Media Project Aimed At Improving Coverage Of Human Rights Issues

    TORONTO — The federal government is investing millions of dollars in a project meant to improve international media coverage of human rights issues, particularly those impacting women and girls.

    Feds Fund Media Project Aimed At Improving Coverage Of Human Rights Issues

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Second NDP Term In Sight If Unions, Supporters Stick Together

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Second NDP Term In Sight If Unions, Supporters Stick Together
    VICTORIA — Premier John Horgan is already talking about British Columbia's New Democrats being re-elected to a second term even though the next election isn't scheduled until the fall of 2021.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Second NDP Term In Sight If Unions, Supporters Stick Together

    CBC Must Diversify Revenue To Protect It From Political Whims, President Says

    CBC Must Diversify Revenue To Protect It From Political Whims, President Says
    The CBC must continually look for new commercial revenue streams — particularly internationally — as a way to protect itself from the whims of politicians, the public broadcaster's president, Catherine Tait, said Friday.

    CBC Must Diversify Revenue To Protect It From Political Whims, President Says

    Floods Finally Subsiding Across Eastern Canada: 'Now You Get Into The Long Slog'

    Floods Finally Subsiding Across Eastern Canada: 'Now You Get Into The Long Slog'
    The worst appears over for flood-stricken areas across eastern Canada.

    Floods Finally Subsiding Across Eastern Canada: 'Now You Get Into The Long Slog'