December 10, 2004
Hall Beach teens survive
two chilly nights on the land
Two medevaced to Iqaluit
for treatment of frozen feet, hands
SARA
MINOGUE
Three teenagers from Hall
Beach are doing well after a short trip to Igloolik turned into a three-day
ordeal that left one boy stranded for three days in temperatures as low as -30
C.
Rescuers found Mickey Barnabas,
17, in good condition except for some mild frostbite, at around 9 p.m. on Tuesday
night. He was about 40 km south of Igloolik.
Suzanne Nattuk, 14, and
Glen Nagmalik, 17, were found earlier that afternoon. Both were medevaced to
Iqaluit for treatment of their frozen feet and hands.
The three young people
left Hall Beach on Sunday around 7 p.m. By Monday evening, they still hadn't
arrived.
Bad luck seems to have
triggered the ordeal.
Trouble started when Barnabas
accidentally fell off the kamotik during the trip. Neither Nattuk nor Nagmalik,
who were riding a snowmobile, noticed he was missing for some time. When they
realized what had happened, they turned around immediately, but could not find
him.
To make matters worse,
a jerry can full of gas fell off the snowmobile as they were searching for their
friend. Eventually, the pair ran out of fuel.
The weather was clear on
Monday, but on Tuesday, the temperature dipped to-30
C.
"Between here and
Hall Beach, that's a tricky area," said Igloolik mayor Elijah Evaluardjuk,
who was still concerned about the outcome of the search on Tuesday afternoon.
Hall Beach Mayor Jopie
Kaernerk quickly organized a search and rescue team of seven snowmobilers to
look for the missing teens.
Joanasie Sarpinak, a member
of Igloolik's search and rescue committee, organized four snowmobilers from
his community.
Together, the two groups
scoured the area between the communities.
Snowdrifts covered tracks
in the snow, but searchers were able to follow what they could find by working
together in a line, picking up tracks where, to others, they appeared to trail
off.
"Luckily we can be
informed because we have satellite phones," Sarpinak said. "Every
time they find tracks or have a problem, they call us."
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