National Post

B.C. motorist survived 74 days lost in woods

Macabre humour part of terrifying ordeal

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VICTORIA • Bear Henry survived more than 70 days stuck in a camper van on a remote Vancouver Island mountain forest road with only a few days’ worth of canned beans, raw rice, cat food and melted snow.

Bear Henry left Victoria on Nov. 27 to find a camp in the Fairy Creek area northwest of Victoria where people had been protesting old-growth logging.

Henry, 37, who is a two-spirit Indigenous person and uses gender-neutral pronouns, spent the days napping, daydreamin­g and trying to stay sane in the van, while hearing search helicopter­s on the other side of the mountain.

“I was just trying to go camping in Fairy Creek and visit the camps that were up there,” Henry said Friday in an interview with reporters about the ordeal.

“It was just raining so hard; I literally blew past the Caycuse (camp).

Henry decided to keep driving even when the gravel road got steeper and more treacherou­s.

“I just kept going to try and find a place to turn around and eventually I just got to a part where it got even worse. At one point I hit a bump and the whole van just shut off.”

The food started to run out in mid-december, but Henry remembered the advice of an uncle who said to survive in the wild stay calm, conserve energy and stay put as long as possible.

Henry said it was difficult to remain composed when fighting for survival.

“It was so scary,” Henry said. “‘My God, am I going to die?”’

“Is this it? This is really real.”

Henry was assaulted and injured with a knife while in

his 20s and has had serious back trouble since tn.

Aside from not knowing where he was, Henry said he wasn’t sure he could make the hike out.

When Henry finally did decide to leave, he walked for 15 hours before a pair of forestry workers drove down the logging road.

The two men recognized Henry as the person reported missing by police and each handed over $20 when they dropped Henry at a coffee shop in Lake Cowichan.

Henry said he was astounded when the workers said he had been in the forest for more than two months.

“It felt like just days,” Henry said. “How does it become 74 days? That’s not humanly possible. I lost 61 pounds.”

Henry said it was terrifying being lost in the forest and not knowing if he would survive, but there were also moments of macabre humour, especially when a bear was prowling the area.

“Every day, I was so scared to get out of my van. Every day I wondered if someone would come and attack me. No one could hear me scream. No one knew where I was. Every day it was just terrifying,” Henry told reporters.

“I saw bear scat and I was like, ‘Bear gets killed by bear in the woods.’ It made me laugh.”

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bear Henry went missing for 74 days in the Cowichan Valley area near Port Renfrew, B.C., and was found by loggers in the area before returning home safely.
CHAD HIPOLITO / THE CANADIAN PRESS Bear Henry went missing for 74 days in the Cowichan Valley area near Port Renfrew, B.C., and was found by loggers in the area before returning home safely.

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