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John B
07-24-2006, 13:37
(07-24) 09:04 PDT Roaring Gap, N.C. (AP) --
Two hikers lost in the rugged North Carolina mountains survived on hard candy and creek water for three nights before they finally found the Blue Ridge Parkway on Monday and waved down a maintenance truck, officials said.

The Miami couple had planned to hike to a waterfall a couple of miles from the parking lot and have a picnic, but they lost the trail, said Charlie Peek of the state Division of Parks and Recreation.

"It's extremely rugged territory, particularly off trail," Peek said.

The Mercedes Benz that Craig Patterson, 44, and Julia Martinez, 35, had been driving Friday morning was found in the parking lot that evening — with the picnic lunch still inside. Searchers spent the weekend combing parts of the more than 20-square-mile Stone Mountain State Park for any sign of the pair, and a Highway Patrol helicopter swept the area.

"They said they got confused and instead of going back down the trail they kept going up," Peek said. "The trail ends in that area and they kept gaining in elevation."

Peek said neither hiker was injured. They were found seven or eight miles from their car and had survived in the woods with simple rations, he said.

"They had a little bit of hard candy and they drank water from a creek," Peek said. "They're in good shape."

Uncle Silly
07-24-2006, 17:39
thank goddess for hard candy! and that creek was a lifesaver... who knew you could find water just running down the side of a mountain like that?!!

orangebug
07-24-2006, 18:04
Where was their cell phone?

rainmaker
07-24-2006, 23:15
Strange, so very strange.

ed bell
07-24-2006, 23:26
3 days? After setting out for a picnic? Off of the BRP? Sounds like the lost tourists really got turned around. They lived in Miami and had a vacation home near the BRP? It's very fortunate that they knew about the life saving properties of creek water.:D

Newb
07-25-2006, 15:20
I was day-hiking southbound from Compton Gap about a month ago in Shenandoah National Park. I was approached by a couple who asked me how far the trail went behind me. I said, "all the way to Maine". Then they pointed behind themselves and asked where that went...I said, "all the way to Georgia."

So I asked them where they were hiking from, because they had no water, no food, and the female was wearing street shoes. It turns out they had taken a walk down a loop trail 3 hours earlier and were completely lost. I pointed them in the direction of the parking lot and told them to follow the white blazes.

I hope they lived.

sherrill
07-25-2006, 17:08
You have to try really hard to get lost in Stone Mtn State Park, if that is where they were.

Sly
07-25-2006, 17:32
Where was their cell phone?

LOL... They did the right thing, they toughed it out! ;)

txulrich
07-25-2006, 17:55
3 days? After setting out for a picnic? Off of the BRP? Sounds like the lost tourists really got turned around. They lived in Miami and had a vacation home near the BRP? It's very fortunate that they knew about the life saving properties of creek water.:D

It's been rumored that that particular creek is the source for the fountain of youth. And you thought that it was in Florida!!!

Jack Tarlin
07-25-2006, 18:05
Very glad to hear from the story that they arrived at the Trailhead equipped with a Mercedes Benz and picnic basket.

Not to rain on the parade or anything, but did they have a map? Extra clothes? Flashlight? Adequate provisions other than what they accidentally had on hand?

Geez, I'm glad it ended happily for them, but this is proof positive that having a spiffy car and a nice box of goodies doesn't necessarily mean you have any brains.

Lucky for them the weather was co-operative or there'd be a Benz and a basket up for grabs on E-Bay.

bigcranky
07-25-2006, 20:52
Stone Mountain State Park is about an hour away from where I live. It would be tough to get lost in the developed area of the park (the trails up over the stone mountain), but these two were hiking up a less-used trail into an area of about 13,000 acres that is about as remote as it gets in the Northwest Piedmont area.

Our local paper had a story on it this morning. They didn't have a phone because they knew from previous experience that they wouldn't have service. The story also said that they both suffered from an unnamed mental disability. Read for yourself:

http://tinyurl.com/zqawv

I'm not sure how long that link will stay active.

bigcranky
07-25-2006, 20:55
To answer Jack, no, they didn't have any of that stuff. This wasn't a hike, it was a 30-minute stroll up the trail from the car, with lunch waiting when they got back. I can truly understand why people wouldn't take SMSP very seriously, as it seems very close to civilization.

(Can anybody else hear the theme song to Gilligan's Island, "...a three-hour cruise...") <grin>

Krewzer
07-26-2006, 13:51
HBO has bought the story for a mini-series.... "Deep Woods Way OFF!"