June 3, 2005
Misadventures on the land higher than usual
SARA MINOGUE
The first part of 2005 has been one of the busier years for Iqaluit's search
and rescue group, says Jimmy Akavak, the RCMP search and rescue spokesperson.
Akavak was also out on the ice this past weekend. At this time of year, he
says, "if there's a crack behind you, it will more than likely be coming
off."
Two weeks ago, four women were rescued on Monday after they didn't show up
to work that morning.
The women were camping at a cabin and ran out of fuel to get home after driving
around Frobisher's Farthest in foggy weather on Sunday and getting disoriented.
They made it back to their cabin and waited for help. Searchers found them by
noon after checking out two places the women usually visited.
This month, another Iqaluit man found himself underneath his skidoo when he
went through the water just past the breakwater.
On May long weekend, John Vander Velde and three others spent an extra night
at a cabin in Ward Inlet after finding they couldn't cross a lake that had been
frozen solid just two days earlier.
That group had three GPS receivers and two satellite phones. Instead of fighting
through ice and slush, they used the phone to charter a helicopter to bring
them back to town, and left their snowmobiles behind for the summer.
Vander Velde's advice to anyone going out on the land is to plan for an extra
few days, tell people where you're going and take a satellite phone and GPS,
or even a cell phone.
His traveling companion also reminds anyone with a GPS to drop by the wildlife
officer to upload the coordinates of the cabins around Iqaluit.
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