Man Lost for a Month Found

Even those with almost no skills can survive, as this story shows...
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Man survives one month lost in California woods

The Associated Press

GORMAN, Calif. (October 31, 2000 11:36 a.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) - A man who wandered into the Angeles National Forest a month ago and got lost has been found alive, police said.

Sean Kelly, who was reported missing Sept. 30, was found by a hunter Monday in the Knapp Ranch area of the forest, about 60 miles north of downtown Los Angeles, sheriff's Deputy Michael Lorenci said.

Kelly, 25, was too weak to walk out, so rescuers airlifted him to Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for exposure.

Kelly told the hunter he had been lost for about two weeks and survived by eating roots and bugs, Lorenci said. To survive, he covered himself with dirt and branches at night to keep warm.

"We're all surprised that he'd been out there for 30 days and that he survived," Lorenci said.


 
Joined
Jun 27, 1999
Messages
51
Label me a cynic ...
easy enough to stay alive for the month.
Harder to stay lost for that time.
Sounds like a stunt ... wonder what's being sold.


Mike



------------------
Mike's Emergency Preparedness Forum


No matter what you do, some things won't work out.
No matter what you do, some things will work out.
Worry about those things that you can make a difference with.
 
Easy enough for some -- but so many die within a few days with all sorts of resources around them. What I was saying is that a little knowledge can even save you.

This was on the National Association for Search and Rescue site:
http://www.nasar.org

Best,

Brian.
 
To me it sounds like a guy who wants to get CBS to pick him to be on 'Survivor'

------------------
"Dream as if you'll live forever, Live as if you'll die today"
-- James Dean

-Jesse Foust
 
60 miles from downtown LA??? Ummmmmmm isn't that the suburbs? I lived in CA (Corona) for awhile, unless he had some mental issues I find it VERY hard to believe he was truely lost.
Just my $.02
Brent...
eek.gif
 
When I was with the county search and rescue team we found a lost hunter who had been out for two days (he hadnt left a notice with anyone at home so no one knew he was lost for two days). It turns out that he had been wandering in circles and had never been more than a mile from his truck that he had left parked on the road.

There are prople out there who could get lost in their own back yard.
 
Scouter27,

That was hilarious!
smile.gif


Josh brings up a good point here: we are into this stuff for many reasons, and take it for granted that everyone else out there has some skills. So many have none at all -- people I talk to are absolutely clueless about what to do and what can happen. What we view as common sense in the woods escapes many because they never learned and are constantly told that "survival is difficult or impossible."

Best,

Brian.
 
I think it was the Boy Scouts where we did this experiment, but it works relatively well, and demonstrates on a small scale what happens on a large scale.

Find a large open field, and blind-fold yourself. Walk in a straight line for a while, then take off your blind-fold and see where you are. I've seen people manage circles less than a hundred feet across like this. I've been on a competition drill team, and you'd think I can walk a straight line, I get a noticeable arc in a hundred feet.

Now take someone who really believes they are lost, stick them in a forest where every tree looks the same to them, and see how far they get before they make it back around to where they started. It won't take long. How many people have you known who got a bit mixed up, wandered around, and then noticed something familiar and got home? Was it because they were somewhere else, and wandered back? Probably not, they just wandered in a circle long enough 'till they came to a place they remembered from before they felt lost.

The moral of this story is know how to navigate. The guy was 60 miles from one of the largest cities in the US. I'll wager that 10 miles max in any given direction would have put him on some kind of road. That road is all it would have taken to make his 30 day adventure a 3 day adventure.

That being said, he did well enough to survive 30 days, and there's a decent chunk of the population that wouldn't have been able to do that. He found water, he found shelter, and he found food. And most important here, he had the will. I'll bet next time he carries a compass.

Stryver
 
"No, I was never lost. But I was mighty bewildered one time for three days."

--- Davy Crockett

[This message has been edited by tallwingedgoat (edited 11-04-2000).]
 
The guy must have wanted to be lost.....If you are sixty miles from downtown LA and you walk in any direction eventually you will find someone! If it happened in Alaska maybe I'd believe it. I wonder if there were any special circumstnces here like mental disability etc.
 
I'll agree that some people could get lost and die at the mall ...

But, this guys had enough sense to find food, water, and shelter for a month ... but couldn't head toward that REALLY bright light on the horizon (and I lived most of my life in that area of California ... it really isn't as easy as I make it sound. But, ...).

I ain't buying it.


Mike (cynic at large)



------------------
Mike's Emergency Preparedness Forum


No matter what you do, some things won't work out.
No matter what you do, some things will work out.
Worry about those things that you can make a difference with.
 
i REFUSE to believe this guy was lost that close to L.A. and couldnt find his way out,even if he was walking in circles.no way.hell,even I could find MY way out....
rolleyes.gif
 
The story says he was out in the woods for a month. But it also says he was lost for 2 weeks. So maybe he wasn't actaully lost the entire time.

If he was injured somehow and decided to wait for rescue, it would be more plausible.
 
The whole truth comes out, folks:

On the Run, Man Survives a Month in
Wilderness

By JOE MOZINGO, DAVID KELLY, Times Staff Writers


Sometime in late September, Sean Kelly drove his small
car to an isolated campsite among the oaks three miles north of
Castaic Lake.
Wanted for jumping bail in Ventura County, the depressed
25-year-old transient had called his mother in Oregon to say
he had swallowed some pain medication in a suicide attempt.
Then, at the Bear Campground, he set up camp and ran a
corrugated hose from his car's exhaust pipe into his dome tent.
But then Kelly disappeared, apparently leaving behind his
food, clothes and blankets.
On Monday, a month after he set off alone into the rugged
canyons of the Angeles National Forest, he was found--weak,
hungry and ready to return to civilization.
The tale he told rescuers sounded like some dark and
dangerous version of the TV show "Surivor." The veteran
outdoorsman said he ate berries and roots, was chased by
bears and covered himself with branches and dirt to stay
warm.
Kelly was airlifted to a hospital and now awaits extradition
to Ventura County for his court warrants, which stem from a
February felony arrest for carrying a concealed weapon while
driving under the influence.
Still, his family, who thought he had walked into the forest
to die, was elated to hear the news.
"I was scared to death for him," said his father, Martin, 62,
who had frantically searched the Castaic area for his son.
"What if I found him dead?"
The elder Kelly and other family members said Sean was
prepared to survive his ordeal. He had spent much of his
childhood on his father's 40-acre ranch in nearby Green
Valley.
"He knew the Angeles National Forest, so he wouldn't have
been frightened to be there," said his father, who now lives in
Oxnard.
Growing up, Kelly read little else but outdoor magazines.
When he turned 18, he enlisted in the Army and became a
paratrooper. He learned survival skills while undergoing Army
Ranger training in North Carolina and Panama, his father said.
But Kelly injured his back in a parachute jump and was
discharged from the military without becoming a Ranger, his
father added. The discharge affected him badly; he sank into
depression. After living with his father for a while, he left the
Oxnard home in May.
"He was living out of his little . . . car and finally it got the
best of him," said the elder Kelly.
On Sept. 23, the young man called his mother in Oregon
and said he was planning to take all his pain medication. The
next day, he called again and said he had done it.
His father knew he had been living near Castaic and
desperately drove to every campsite in the area.
He found no sign of his son.
A week later, a hunter in the Bear Campground found
Kelly's car with the hose running into a tent, with no one at the
campsite. The man called authorities.
The Santa Clarita Valley Mountain Rescue Team searched
the canyons for the next two days. The team called off the
rescue effort because it ran out of leads. Things didn't look
good.
"The search party told us that it was a 1 in 10 chance of
finding him alive," said Robert Kelly, Sean's uncle.
But about 3 p.m. Monday, Kelly was found by a hunter
about three miles from his car, sheriff's officials said. He had
descended from about 5,500 feet, along the side of a ridge, to
a place called Knapp Ranch. Roads to the area are primitive
and overgrown with brush.
By all appearances, Kelly had spent a month in the wild,
said authorities.
"The area is not that easy to get to," said Sgt. Steven
Jenkins, who is in charge of the mountain rescue team. "I
wouldn't doubt him if he said he's been out there the whole
time."
When he was found, Kelly was wearing pants, long
underwear and a T-shirt. He was lucid and rational but so
exhausted he could barely walk. "He was tired and weak and
wanted to get out of there," said Jenkins.
Survival experts on Tuesday agreed that living off the land is
possible, but a tough task in the dry Southern California
chaparral. With some basic skills and knowledge of local plant
life, one can get by, they say. And humans can usually live two
weeks or more with no food at all.
Christopher Nyerges, who runs the School of Self-Reliance
in Eagle Rock, said a person could eat small animals and
insects, as well as wild onions, acorns, cattails and
elderberries.
Kelly told authorities he ate berries and insects to stay alive.
He said he buried himself to stay warm in the forest, where
temperatures have dipped to freezing recently. He also said
that, at one point, he was chased by bears and discarded his
jacket to throw off his scent. Nyerges and other instructors
said that didn't quite ring true.
"Bears don't particularly chase people," said Nyerges. "But
people who don't eat much and are on the edge tend to
hallucinate."
The sheriff's emergency services detail airlifted Kelly to
Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital in Santa Clarita.
He was then taken to an inmate ward of County-USC
Medical Center, where he was in stable condition on Tuesday.
Kelly will be extradited for arraignment in Ventura County
within 10 days. After his arrest on Feb. 19 for drunk driving
and carrying a weapon, Kelly failed to appear for a court date
while out on bail, a spokesman said.
Martin Kelly said Tuesday that he has not spoken to his son
yet but was planning to visit him later in the day. In any case,
he said he will make sure his son gets the help he needs.
"I won't turn my back on him by any stretch of the
imagination," he said.
 
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